Yearly Archive for 2007

First Monday

First Monday in the new house, that is. All in all, a pretty good day. Some highlights and updates:

Unpacking and Renovation

Wallpaper started in the dining room today. It’s looking beautiful. I also went by the Circuit City and picked up some component video cable (orange, green, and blue plugs) for the DVD player hooked up to my TV, something I’ve been meaning to do for a year. I’ll finally be getting the absolute best video quality. Not that I’m likely to be able to tell the difference, given my less than stellar eyesight, but someone probably will, and it seemed like a fine time for an equipment upgrade. Aside from wondering just how the electronics industry gets away with so drastically overpricing audio/visual cables, I’m pretty happy with my purchase. Especially since I found an unopened Monster audio RCA cable in a box. Since I didn’t buy it, I don’t even have to feel guilty about using such an over-hyped, overpriced brand. Instead, I have the opportunity to bask unencumbered in the glory of audio cable so thick that it would pass for Indiana Jones’ whip.

Phones! Internets! TVs!

The AT&T tech came early for the jack repair, which unfortunately took a few hours. We have working jacks again. Turns out the phone wiring in the attic was accidentally cut by someone when they were removing excess and antiquated wires from previous, very old cable television and phone installs. Oops.

(We actually have some old four prong telephone jacks around. They’re absolutely useless, but kind of fun to look at.)

And now for the ceremonial rant. I checked with the DSL people again today. Lo and behold, our order for DSL service had been somehow cancelled. For the second time–the first time they cancelled it two weeks before we moved in. Bizarre. At any rate, I was told that things were straightened out (again) and that we would be activated for service by Wednesday at 8p, this week. I even got an order confirmation number, which I’ve not had before.

The Billing Department representative also tried to sell me a 99 dollar router/modem and installation (even though I’ve already got a wireless router), and more long distance. She did this while I was waiting to find out when our DSL would be provisioned, and was incredibly pushy. I actually felt like I was being pressured into buying more services after being thoroughly confused. I eventually just agreed to “think about the offer” so I could get her to shut up about it, finish filling my order and get off the phone.

I suppose a bad experience with a customer service representative was inevitable, as much as I’ve been calling them. And I’ve been talking to the Billing Department, which means there was bound to be some sort of tomfoolery eventually. Still, grar.

I’m beyond any sort of frothing rage at this point. Actually, I’m not even angry or as frustrated as I could be. It’s getting just a bit too bizarre. I wouldn’t be suprised if our order is somehow cancelled again or squirrels eat through the phone lines. I keep waiting for Ashton Kutcher to pop out and announce I’ve been punk’d. At which point I’d probably stab him, because I just found my knife and internet withdrawal is starting to make me a bit twitchy.

Our very friendly satellite TV installer is also going to stop by tomorrow to switch out the ViP 211 HD receiver in my office with the ViP 722 HD receiver/DVR in the master bedroom. I called him today and asked if this was something I could do myself, but quickly realized that was not the case when I was told I would have to go up into the attic and retone the line. I don’t even know what that means.

Once we have the internet, I’m going to research what it will take to connect our receivers to the home network, and if it’s even worth it. Seems like a fun project.

Father of the Bride II is over in fifteen minutes, then I’m going to bed. Peace out.

[tags]renovation, audio/visual cable, audio cable, monster cable, video cable, component cable, component video cable, component video, AT&T, at&t, phones, phone, phone company, phone repair, dsl, AT&T Yahoo! DSL, at&t yahoo! dsl, Dish, dish, dish satellite, Dish satellite, Dish Satellite, vip 211, ViP 211, VIP 211, vip 722, ViP 722, VIP 722[/tags]

The Wallpaper, Part Deux. Also, AT&T is Gnarly.

For completeness’ sake, I note that after another day’s work by Mario the Wallpaper Installer, the paper in the master bedroom is pretty much done, except for some that will need to be redone because of faulty material (which we have already reordered). He’s going to start the dining room tomorrow. Cool.

Baseboards Wednesday. Probably.

Got the phone message confirmation for our jack repair appointment today. I don’t think I mentioned before, but I scheduled this appointment for the 2-6p window. I thought the 8-11a option too dangerous, because we’re still going at odd hours here and I doubt anyone would be very happy on the odd chance they showed up that early. There was a later window as well, but I didn’t want to give anyone reason to show up at 9p if I didn’t have to.

My thoughtful scheduling was for naught. According to the phone message, the tech will appear sometime between 8a and 6p. ¿Que? That’s not so much a window as the entire day. What was the point of scheduling a window, then?

Yes, I am aware this isn’t a major gripe, as I plan to be awake and getting together by 8 tomorrow morning anyway. Yet after the aforementioned, continuing madness with the DSL line and the revelation that we will need to pay exorbitant fees to get the jacks built into our walls to actually work, I find myself somewhat less magnanimous than usual. We’re not quite to the straw-camel point, though. I know I personally don’t plan to raze any buildings to the ground with a BIC lighter and a straight razor unless the DSL isn’t working by Wednesday night.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ll now go back to being distracted by the Food Network in high definition. Mmm. Designer Wedding Cakes.

[tags]renovation, moving, wallpaper, AT&T, at&t, customer service, phone, phones, phone company, phone service[/tags]

Wrap My Wood (or: the Wallpaper Cometh)

(Originally written on Sat 1 December 2007. Still no internet.)

Yes, I’m scraping the bottom of the double entendre barrel. Not a whole lot going on today. More boxes continue to be unpacked. Board games, clothing,
master bedroom stuffs, and other goodies continue to show up. Giving a full, exact detailing of everything that’s been unpacked would, as stated previously, be just about as enthralling as listening to Ben Stein read the phonebook, so allow me to state simply that we’ve been busy.

I started reading Breakup Babe, a Novel, and aside from being slightly annoyed at the pretentiousness of those who think appending “a novel” to the title of a book is a good idea, am generally finding it an enjoyable, well-written work, even if I don’t just adore the main character. Let’s be honest: even if I don’t particularly like the main character half the time. Which, I think, is a sign of just how well-written she is. More on this later, perhaps. I don’t want to attempt even a ten-second book review until I’ve actually finished it. It could go either way at this point.

The wallpaper installer from the painting crew is here, which is news. It’s also, just to be clear, the source of this entry’s questionably tasteful title. He’s currently fitting out the master bedroom, and will then move onto the dining room. Then baseboards just as soon as my cousin is available. All that remains after that, to my knowledge, are a number of electrical outlet faceplates, a few vent covers, and some paint that needs to be fixed, and renovation/construction will be complete. Just a few more days, and I’ll be able to unload the rest of my books and equipment, and actually feel like I can touch my office furniture without fear of knocking it over and being crushed under its tremendous, well lacquered weight.

If I sound like I’m fixating selfishly on my suite while ignoring the accomplishments in unpacking and decorating going on in the rest of the house, I probably am let me assure that this is not the case. I simply don’t feel the urge to comment on the rest because it’s going so well and already looks so amazing, especially considering we really only started in earnest on Thursday. Also, I don’t feel like I might possibly be killed or maimed by falling ten-foot-plus solid wood bookcases in any other part of the house. And let’s be clear, fan of luxurious office furniture I may be, but if I’m to be smashed into oblivion, I demand at the very least a more exciting instrument of my undoing.

Get me some rampaging giraffes or Steve Jobs in an Aston Martin fleeing from paparazi, and then we’ll talk. Because seriously, giraffes.

Edit (Sat 1 December 2007, 7:42 PM US Central): Wallpaper in master bedroom is done, except for a bit of faulty paper we couldn’t use. Replacement roll will be installed later. One of the flooring company staff is here removing the baseboards from the dining room in preparation for the painter/wallpaper guy to come back tomorrow and do that room.

[tags]renovation, moving, wallpaper, breakup babe[/tags]

Trip the Thursday Fantastico: Moving, Medication, and Other Stories

I’m typing this entry on Friday, 30 November. For reasons I shall explain below, no idea when it will actually be posted.

Moving, Continued…

Unpacking of boxes continues apace. What follows is not a complete progress report, but rather some highlights, as I (a) don’t have the stamina to write it all down (b) haven’t even bothered going into a couple of the bedrooms, so I can’t say what’s going on in there, and (c) don’t won’t to bore everyone to tears, which I’ve probably done already, if we’re being completely honest. The kitchen is virtually completely unpacked and set up, save for later rearranging and the retrieval of more pottery and implements from the storage on the coast, and the dining room is well on the way. My bedroom is now mostly free of cardboard containers, save one I’m holding off on until my office is ready to be stuffed full of my assorted electro-mechanical stuff. Clothing and other assorted goodies, like a very fashionable set of leather bound encyclopedias and history and law books, have resurfaced, as well. Like most other rooms in the house, save for one, it’s also free of baseboards (the trim around the bottom of walls), which means we can’t slide any furniture into place until my cousin comes up, probably this weekend or early next week, to install said baseboards, which won’t happen until the painting crew installs the wall paper in the dining room tomorrow morning. If we put my furniture in place now, we’d just have to move it again, which is a nonstarter, as it’s the Heaviest Solid Wood Furniture in the Universe. Our other pieces might not have quite the mass, but would be similarly cumbersome to prematurely move, and no one wants to risk accidental damage to the walls that were just repainted, at any rate. The downside to this being that we are currently camped out in the guest bedrooms, as ours are either filled with furniture stuck in the middle of the floor waiting to be put against the wall, filled with boxes, or otherwise not quite ready to be lived in. It doesn’t help that we don’t have beds for those rooms yet, either. The perils of moving from a place with two bedrooms to four and deciding the beds you already have look better in the guest suites.

There’s other little random stuff, like a floor needing to be fixed where a doorway was widened, some fans needing to be hung, the fact that none of our windows has any dressing except for some giant sheets of plastic hung in the bedrooms for modesty’s sake, but that’s really transient stuff. After all, we have satellite TV and surround sound speakers built in to the walls, so we’re easily distracted.

Painting has turned into a nightmare, but the less said about that the better.

Come and Swim in My Pool…Or Not

I’ve made much over the last few weeks of the pool we’re having installed, going so far as to pimp questionably exciting pictures of said water hole’s construction cycle in this space. Construction ground to a halt after the safety fence mandated by city ordinance apparently didn’t pass inspection, but that was apparently an error or has been otherwise taken care of (and if I sound vague it’s because I really don’t know what’s going on; the pool people didn’t really tell us much, as taking care of inspections and stuff behind the scenes is supposed to be part of the package. Today the plumber came out and turned the gas back on for the water heater in preparation for the final inspection, after which the plaster will be poured and the construction will be complete. So when I post a vague entry in a week or two proclaiming nothing more and nothing less than “IT’S ALIVE!” you’ll know what happened.

Infusion of Comfort and Joy and AT&T/Yahoo DSL (Or: The Time of Ranting is Upon You)

What follows is a brief description of my infusion that devolves into a lengthy rant about the not-quite-fun I’ve had trying to get our internet and phone jacks up and working. Let me preface my griping by noting that while I’m more than a little annoyed with ATT as a corporate service entity at this point, the support technicians I dealt with on the phone were friendly and did their best to help me. I’m ranting at the system, not them. I am also putting the rest of this entry under a cut, because it’s really just an evolved form of whining, and I am aware of that.

[tags]moving, pool, AT&T, at&t, dsl, yahoo dsl, yahoo DSL, yahoo, AT&T dsl, DSL, AT&T DSL, at&t dsl, at&t DSL[/tags]

Continue reading ‘Trip the Thursday Fantastico: Moving, Medication, and Other Stories’

die einzwängenden Finger!

Title is the output of feeding Apple’s Translation Widget “The Cramping Fingers.” When translating the phrase back to English with the same widget, I get “the in-squeezing fingers.” Things like this keep me from worrying that machines will rise up to kill us in the near future.

I spend a disproportionate amount of my day in front of a computer, so I’m a bit of a keyboard geek. If I’ve got to use something for hours at a time, I want it to be top quality. For me and many others, the epitome of keyboards were the IBM Model M and Apple Extended Keyboard/Apple Extended Keyboard II, the latter of which was the keyboard I had on my first computer.

Quoting Steve from the Apple Extended Keyboard II page linked above, these keyboards are relics from a time

when building a keyboard actually meant building something that you could, in an emergency, reliably use as a blunt weapon.

Most modern keyboards would shatter if you attempted to use them to defend your person, and that’s just not acceptable. But I would wager that for most, it is not these relics’ value as melee weapons that makes them desirable. Rather, it is the mechanical, spring-based key-switches. These, as their name implies, spring back up immediately after they are pressed, which gives a much more solid feel–the user knows when a key has been hit, because it’s already trying to come back up.

Theoretically, and anecdotally in my usage, this results in a more pleasant typing experience, as the user expends much less energy pressing the keys, resulting in less hand strain and perhaps faster typing. By contrast, most modern keyboards use very cheap rubber/silicone membrane switches that are, for lack of a better word, mushy. There’s no real response in many of these cheap boards when you hit the keys, making it difficult to train your muscles when to know to stop, which means much wasted, superfluous effort and mashing.

There are a number of options for getting high quality mechanical keyboards today. I prefer the Das Keyboard. face-profile.jpg Out of all the boards I’ve seen currently in production with mechanical switches, it’s one of, if not the, sturdiest, and as such serves very well the keyboard-as-blunt-instrument-of-destruction ideal. It’s built with high quality mechanical switches, and doesn’t try to hide the fact that these switches are loud. When I really get going, it sounds like a tiny airplane is taking off, which I like to imagine impresses onlookers and passerby. Plus, there isn’t a single keycap anywhere on the entire keyboard. I’m enough of a nerd that I count that as a feature. And here’s a neat thing that those classic keyboards didn’t have: the keys are weighted. It takes less pressure to hit the keys meant for your pinky than for your pointer finger, etc. There’s even a nice chart on the we site illustrating the pressure zones. Cool! (Bonus: Casual usage of your computer by those just passing through is discouraged, as newcomers are thoroughly intimidated, even if they already know how to touch type. It’s kind of funny to watch.)

The keyboard does have two caveats potential buyers should be aware of. First, it’s rather expensive: 69-80 dollars retail, depending on where you shop. I don’t consider this a negative, per se: it’s a high quality piece of equipment and should last for years. You get what you pay for.

Caveat deux is a genuine negative, one I hadn’t discovered until tonight. The Das Keyboard is designed for Windows devices but since it’s just a USB keyboard there’s nothing to stop you from using it with a Mac. However, two of the key mappings are hardwired to be in the wrong place for a Mac user. Specifically, the Option (Alt) and Command (Windows)* keys are swapped. Since the latter is the key** to 95 percent of all keyboard shortcuts on the Mac, this is a bit of a problem, though it’s certainly not insurmountable. Quite the contrary, the solution is simple: using the Control Panel, it is very easy to tell the system to read a Command signal as Option, and vice versa. I did this several months ago when I got the keyboard and never thought about it again.

But as I mentioned in my last post, we’re moving, I’m writing this from a hotel room, and my svelte Das Keyboard is in the back of a Jeep Rubicon somewhere, which means I’m using my laptop’s built in keyboard again. I didn’t think much of this until I tried to Select All and instead pasted a symbol. Switching the key signals produced the proper behavior on the Das Keyboard, but left the internal keyboard with the key signals incorrectly swapped. Annoying. It took me ten minutes to realize the keyboard circuits hadn’t literally been crossed, and another ten to find the setting to switch the keys back, and thanks to my muscle memory and the odd contortions necessary to do keyboard shortcuts when the Command key is in the wrong place, I was left with a not insignificant bit of finger cramping. Double plus ungood.

This was easy enough to fix, but as far as I can tell, I have to go in and reset it manually every time I need to plug in/unplug my external keyboard. This is, obviously, somewhat lame, and could be fixed with a very simple keyboard driver from the makers of Das Keyboard, but they, like many other hardware vendors, do not believe full Mac support is worth their time, so I find myself faced with an experience that is overly clunky. Perhaps I can learn enough AppleScript to automate the setting changes? I shall have to ruminate on this. Any suggestions would be appreciated.

Peace out.

*Yes, I know Command and the Windows key are not direct analogues, but for the sake of this discussion, they’re close enough.
**Pun!

[tags]keyboard, keyboards, apple, apple extended keyboard, apple extended keyboard 2, apple extended keyboard II, ibm, ibm model m, model m, das keyboard, mac, macintosh, macs, macintoshes, os x, mac os x[/tags]

Moving Day. And also, the pool.

I’ve really fallen off with the blogging, haven’t I? I’d like to say I have a good excuse, and while I have been pretty busy, there’s really nothing that stopped me from posting a few sentences here and there. In my defense, I’ve been feeling a bit boring lately. I shall endeavor to be less so. As an act of penance, I will entertain you with pictures that may in fact be boring.

We’re moving into our new house today. For obvious reasons, I’m not going to say much about it or where it is, but I will say I’m pretty excited, especially since I’ll actually have my own home office now (and not just a corner of the bedroom dedicated to my vast swaths of technology), and a swimming pool. Really, really looking forward to the latter–it’ll be great to exercise and work on my mobility in a way I just can’t do on dry land. We’re doing hardwoods (done) and painting/wallpapering (not done), so the usual stories of the trivails of home renovation apply. Not going to go into it save to say it’s not nearly as much fun as Home and Garden Television would have you believe. Perky, crazy people with sledgehammers don’t show up in vans and trucks and cavort merrily around, for one thing.

Pool MosaicThe house we got didn’t actually have a pool, so we’re putting one in. I’ve been sure to take pictures of every stage of construction, because I’m a geek and and a photographic record of the birth of our magnificent water hole. I was going to do a series of posts for each stage, but then I realized that was kind of redundant, as I’ve already got them neatly organized into a collection of photosets over at Flickr, complete with color commentary, so I figure I’ll just link to that. Behold! (Obviously, it’s not finished yet. We’re waiting on the inspection of the fence, not shown in these photos, before the final plastering (laying of the visible surface of the pool). In the meantime, to help you visualize, it’ll be a color called Black Sand. The pool itself is eight-by-thirty-six feet. The whole thing should have a pond-like ambiance.

New Couch 2 And while I’m at it, take a gander at this awesome couch we got. Cool, eh? I suggest clicking through to get a full idea of its hugeness. And just to be clear (even though I already mentioned this on Flickr) that’s the furniture store, not our living room. In fact, if I’m not mistaken, for the moment the giant couch of burnished orange doom is probably the only item of furniture in our living room.

My apologies in advance if these image links break. For the moment, my Flickr Fu is weak and neophyte, so I may be doing it wrong. If so, let me know and I’ll fix it posthaste.

And while I’m on the subject of Flickr, let me take a moment to note that my preferred blogging software, MarsEdit 2, has built in Flickr integration. Whenever I want to put a picture from my Flickr account, all I have to do is press the Media button in my menubar, click the Flickr tab, and then browse (or use the built-in search) to find the picture I want. Size and alignment may then be specified. Most convenient. In case your curious, I use Flickr Uploadr to get my images up onto the site. It serves my purposes quite nicely.

Peace out. Will report in again, hopefully sooner rather than later.

[tags]house, construction, pool, photos, photographs, flickr, marsedit, flickr uploadr[/tags]

Mac Attack…

I really should just give up on this whole post-once-a-week commitment. It’s quite obvious I’m no good at it.

At any rate, some neat things from around the Mac web that have caught my eye over the last few days.

The Look

In honor of Halloween, here’s a guide (with prices) to dressing like Justin Long, the guy that plays the Mac in the “I’m a Mac” commercials. Almost decided to do this for Halloween, but I a) have no where to be that anyone will see me b) will not be getting any trick or treaters, and c) in the absence of (a) and (b) am not willing to spend $157.97 for the ensemble. Looking that casual should in no universe ever cost that much money.

Thought: Apple should sell the Justin Long clothing set at Apple Stores. Booku* bucks from fanboys with more disposable income than me (which is quite a lot of people, I think).

*Is this a word?

Mind Over Matter (and Reality)

Also of note is an eloquent fellow named Chris, who somehow managed to get the graphpaper.com domain and keep it (surely in defiance of the processed paper mega concerns and their armies of lawyer ninja), who frames the issue of switching from Windows to Mac in terms of a 19th century sensory experiment. Thanks to John Gruber over at Daring Fireball for the reference. Quoting:

In 1896, a scientist named George M. Stratton, showing an ingenuity that must have seemed like madness at the time, conducted a fascinating experiment in visual perception with himself as the subject. He constructed a pair of goggles with special lenses that inverted his view of the world by 180 degrees, causing him to see everything upside down, as if he were standing on his head, continuously. He wore the goggles for many days, never once opening his eyes without wearing them (he would shower with his eyes closed, for example). 

The article uses this experiment as a metaphor for the adaptability of computer users to new interface paradigms, and quite handily illustrates how easily and quickly the mind can reprogram itself as needed. I’ve thought for a long while that moving from one computing platform is as easy as sitting down and using your new device, but the fact remains that there are a large number of users out there who won’t consider moving from one operating system (or web browswer, or email client, etc.) to another, regardless of possible benefits, because of some sort of fear that their computer will become unusable for them and they won’t be able to get any work done and in the worst case something might actually explode. Articles like this emphasize the fact that while, yes, there is an adjustment period in any change, it is surprisingly short and painless.

And, so far as the Mac vs Windows debate goes, newer Macs all are able to run Windows out of the box, so retreating to something familiar is possible. Most often, though, one hears of Mac converts buying a new machine with the idea in their head that they’ll dual-boot or virtualize Windows in the begining so they don’t have to completely leave behind what they had before, and then finding themselves so enamoured with the Mac OS that they never enter Windows again, and go on to lead happier, more productive lives, with more disco parties.

Okay, so maybe part of that sentence might be made up. But in all seriousness, switching operating systems isn’t the Herculean task many make it out to be, similar in proportion to attempting to learn a new language by parachuting into a foreign country with no translation tools at all on your person and hoping for the best. It’s much closer to switching from a manual car from 1950 to a modern automatic. The car’s function remains basically the same, but there are a few minor details you’ll have to master to get the most out of it. And to continue to this obviously pro-Mac metaphor to its logical conclusion, once you do master those details, you’ll be much happier. Which brings me to my next item of interest…

Mac OS X 10.5 in (Roughly) 48 Hours

The next major version of Mac OS X, codenamed Leopard, will hit the globe at large on Friday. This is exciting news. Other, better sites have been putting a lot of effort into covering just why this new OS promises to be more awesome than Betty Boop with an uzi and a wakizashi fighting undead zombie hordes (okay, so that might just be my version of awesome, but bear with me here), and I’m not going to try to duplicate that effort here. Rather, allow me to refer you to the guided tour on this page.

That’s all for now. Later days.

[tags]mac, macintosh, macs, macintoshes, apple, justin long, halloween, switcher, switching, mac os x, os x, mac os x 10.5, os x 10.5, leopard[/tags]

Netcasting and Online Activism: Don’t Lose Sight of the Message Because the Messenger is New and Different

Podcast (quoting liberally from the linked article):

[A] digital media file, or a series of such files, that is distributed over the Internet using syndication feeds for playback on portable media players and personal computers. The term, like “radio”, [sic] can refer either to the content itself or to the method by which it is syndicated; the latter is also termed podcasting. The host or author of a podcast is often called a podcaster.

Many shows, both audio and video, are distributed in this manner. TWiT.tv puts out a number of shows on a variety of tech topics, with new episodes delivered weekly. Major networks like MSNBC also syndicate this way. The great majority of this content is completely free. Because the iPod and iTunes were the first hardware/software combo that facilitated this sort of content distribution, the word podcast popped up to illustrate the idea that one could easily subscribe to downloadable content that would be automatically and regularly culled from the Internet and synced to one’s iPod for listening/viewing. Even as the ability to subscribe and sync to this content became more ubiquitous and cross platform, no longer requiring the use of Apple products, the term stuck.

Leo Laporte, head of TWiT.tv, which boasts 280,000 subscribers, recently put up a very interesting post on why the term podcast is not only inaccurate, but downright restrictive and damaging to the entire syndication-based content delivery ecosystem. Definitely worth a read. Consider this excerpt:

I create shows that are distributed on the Internet via download, Flash, and, oh yeah, RSS, but it’s the show that’s the thing. By focusing on the RSS we’ve confused people and limited our audience. Even the word I suggested last year, “netcast,” doesn’t serve. It’s a show, period. It doesn’t matter how it’s distributed. It’s all just content. Tying the content to its method of distribution is confusing our audience and holding us back.

I really agree with what he’s saying, and I’m glad someone so articulate took the time to set it out: it’s all about the content. Reading it made me think of another related point.

Content is not intrinsically more or less interesting or important because of the technology used to deliver it, even though different technologies make different options available.

Imagine, for a moment, that it’s 1943. Citizens of the United States get most of their news and entertainment from the radio, as television has not penetrated the market yet, though some people do own sets. President Roosevelt intends to make a speech on an important issue, knowing it will be distributed live over the radio (and perhaps TV) and then spread across the world in written form by wire services. These three formats each have distinct and unique advantages and disadvantages in terms of accessibility (radios and televisions are accessible to the illiterate/blind while written text is not), penetration (how many people have radios vs those who can buy a newspaper vs those who have a television), storability, and other factors. Intangible characteristics are likewise considerable. Someone reading a copy of the speech wouldn’t be able to hear the inflections in FDRs voice that a radio listener would, and that radio listener would likewise miss clues in the president’s body language. There’s also the economic factor: radio and television are free after initial equipment purchase, or totally free if someone shares their set. Newspapers must be paid for, which causes a problem for the very poor. Radio is also, in this context, the only live option.

While all three mediums excel at presenting information in a specific way, the ideas presented do not change or become more or less valuable based on the method used to share them.

I think it’s particularly important to harp on this in light of the recent attention paid by traditional news sources (large media outlets, including their online arms) to grassroots political organizing and information sharing activity on the Internet. They’ve gone so far as to embrace the term netroots to describe, and I quote:

political activism organized through blogs and other online media, including wikis and social network services. The word is a portmanteau of Internet and grassroots, reflecting the technological innovations that set netroots techniques apart from other forms of political participation. In the United States, the term is used mainly in left-leaning circles.

For two reasons, this term really grates on me, to the point that I actually grit my teeth a bit when I realized I’d have to use it here. First, and definitely less importantly, I’m a computer science major and a technology geek. I absolutely can’t stand it when the mainstream media makes up a new cutesy word to describe a technological concept that doesn’t do anything to help people understand it, and may actually cause problems. In this respect, I cringe whenever I hear anyone blithely start talking about the “netroots” because it’s very close to a term that already has a technical meaning. The Internet root name servers, the thirteen redundant servers that are responsible for making sure domain names (e.g.: www.domain.com) work worldwide. There are thousands (millions?) of other DNS servers in use all around the world, but they depend on the thirteen root nameservers to make sure their information is correct and up to date. Referring to political activists online as “netroots” needlessly muddles the waters and makes explaining the role of the root name servers that much more difficult. (It might not seem like much more difficulty, but host name resolution is already a geeky enough topic that most non-techies don’t even want to think about it to begin with.)

But as annoying as that is, it’s really just a matter of diction. What’s more important in the netroots appellation is the false implication that Internet based activists are somehow significantly different in ideology or aims from those who stick to more traditional methods (the historic grassroots folks). This isn’t the case at all. Yes, using the internet to spread news and information and coordinate low-level campaign volunteers increases one’s reach and the opportunity for personal involvement: citizen-driven political activism limited to local and regional scopes can reach into any home with internet access. Ease of participation (and the fact that one doesn’t have to leave their home if they don’t want to) means Internet-based grassroots activities are far more widespread and visible on a national scale. Still, the content and ideas–the issues that motivate activists, analyses and speeches, etc.–do not change in any significant way just because the internet is being used for communication instead of, say, paper newsletters. Undeniably, more content will be published, and faster, than would have been otherwise, as all that’s needed to put something up on the internet is a free blogging system and time (compare this with the difficulty of creating, mass producing, and distributing a newsletter or pamphlet), but again, ease of publication does not in any substantive way effect the nature of the content (except, perhaps, for the potential lack of copy editing).

Much is also made of the fact that it is the anti-war wing of the Democratic Party that constitutes most bottom-up activity. This is not as newsworthy as the mainstream media would have you believe. Historically, grassroots activists have always been more extreme to a degree than the mainline party machinery, which is constrained by a philosophy of not veering too far from the safe, appeal-to-as-many-people-as-possible path (contrast the grassroots element of the Democratic Party’s enthusiasm for getting out of Iraq as soon as possible with the Democratic Presidential Candidates inability or unwillingness to swear to have the US out of the country by 2013). Activists need not be constrained by the requirements of political gamesmanship, and have no reason to fear expressing more radical (compared to the official party line) opinions. Internet activism has not made people more extreme in their views; it has simply made those whose views are not the mainstream, sanitized-for-TV variety more visible.

The Internet is just a medium, like television or printed news or radio. It does have some very compelling advantages in terms of ease of access and ease of publishing. When people speak of the ‘net as a democratizing force, this is what they’re talking about: never before has it been so easy for the average citizen to be informed and contribute meaningfully to both local and national public debate. The traditional news media are right to emphasis this aspect.

Where they go wrong is by implying, either subtly or overtly, that opinions expressed via online grassroots activities are somehow less valid or more fringe because of source. The source is the electorate, the citizens who voted to put our current officials in office. During the Vietnam War, anti-war activists who campaigned door to door for McCarthy weren’t considered to have fringe ideas–the public widely reviled the war during that period. Their campaign approach sidestepped traditional political machinery, which earned them some ire in certain circles. The establishment did not like McCarthy, to say the least. Modern day political parties likewise try to portray online activists as fringe elements because they are unfiltered and raw and conflict with high-power political maneuvering in Washington. Example: the Democratic Party for a variety of political reasons won’t take a firm stance on ending the war in a given period of time, so they really would rather downplay the idea that online activists represent the desires of the mainstream (as shown by polls) because then they are revealed as not doing at all what they were elected to do in the first place: get us out of Iraq now.

If you want to debate for or against the content and ideas propagated by online activists, do it on the merits of what is or isn’t being said. Don’t try to reject or ridicule something because the medium is new and you don’t understand the mechanics behind it (or can’t gain control of the medium, which seems to be the objection raised by some corners of the mainstream media). That makes just about as much sense as saying a book isn’t as valuable or worthy of consideration because it was made using a printing press and not by hand.

And finally, those trying to rile everyone up by asking the question of whether blogs will replace traditional media are creating a false dichotomy. As I showed with the WWII President Roosevelt hypothetical above, there is no reason multiple mediums cannot and should not coexist. A publisher succeeds or fails on the basis of whether or not their content is worthwhile and accessable. Those who are afraid of blogging are admitting to a tacit fear that their own content is not up to par when competition is available, and that’s another problem (and post) entirely.

[tags]podcast, netcast, rss, ipod, itunes, apple, twit, leo laporte, internet, content, politics, political activism, information, information sharing, netroots, dns, root nameserver, root name server, dns root nameserver, dns root name server, grassroots, grassroots activists, mainstream media, blog, blogs, blogosphere, twit, this week in tech, msnbc[/tags]

Hello, Technorati

Technorati Profile

EDIT (14:16 US Central Time, 29 September 2007): Sorry for the vague, useless post. I didn’t want to risk screwing up Technorati’s indexing spider by explaining what I was doing, but now that it’s done there shouldn’t be a problem. I just signed up for a free Technorati account and claimed my blog so I would have a bit more control over how it was indexed on their site. It’s easy and quick to do and I would recommend anyone who has a weblog tracked by them do the same.

[tags]technorati, blogosphere[/tags]

iPhone Unlocking, Post Software Update 1.1.1

What, you didn’t think I could go a whole two weeks without mentioning the iPhone again, did you?

Apple made clear that the newest update to the iPhone system software would more than likely not only break SIM unlocking, but render the entire phone “bricked.” That is, the phone would no longer work. Quoting directly from the linked article:

“This has nothing to do with proactively disabling a phone that is unlocked or hacked,” Phil Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, told the Associated Press in an interview. “It’s unfortunate that some of these programs have caused damage to the iPhone software, but Apple cannot be responsible for … those consequences.”

At the same time, the iPhone Dev Team, the group largely responsible for SIM-unlocking the iPhone, acknowledged this and warned users not to apply the software update to a SIM unlocked phone until they had a chance to figure out how to work around it, because they had no reason to believe Apple was lying.

Now, iPhone Firmware 1.1.1 hit the web, adding support for the iTunes Music Store as found on the iPod touch and a number of other neat features. But, just as Apple and the Dev Team had warned, attempting to apply the firmware update to a SIM-unlocked iPhone results in catastrophic, in some cases unrecoverable, failure. The author of the linked article notes that in his case not even getting a brand new SIM card from AT&T got things working again. In other words, the hardware is reduced to a very nice looking paperweight.

A few important points rise from this.

  • I think iPhone SIM unlocking is a great thing, for all the reasons I listed in my last post on this matter. Moreover, it is legal in the United States, and even though Apple can and has voided the warranties of modified handsets in accordance with US warranty law, they have a legal obligation not to purposefully prevent the unlocking of the phone. They do not seem to be doing that at this time, and unless evidence can be found to the contrary, threatening to sue Apple over breaking the SIM unlock is misguided at best.
  • Whether or not the iPhone should be unlocked should simply not be part of rational discussion at this point. It can be unlocked, there is demand for unlocked phones, and it is not illegal. From what I’ve seen, arguments to the contrary either demonstrate a lack of understanding of the legal issues, or a conscious desire to troll and stir up trouble.
  • Both Apple and the iPhone Dev Team warned people not to apply this update. Doing so and expecting the phone to still function, as if both parties were lying, was foolish and impatient in the extreme. Anyone who has bricked their phone has no one to blame but themselves. I realize that’s harsh, but even those of us that support third party efforts need to admit that SIM unlocking your phone means you’re on your own. I really hope the iPhone Dev Team or someone out there can figure out how to reverse the damage, but Apple is technically correct that they have no obligation to do so or replace phones for free.
  • As a computer scientist and general techie, I do find dubious the whole idea that software as an entity can somehow be “permanently damaged,” which is what Apple says is happening here. Software is just data on a storage device. Unless it’s on a ROM chip, nothing about it is in any way permanent. It should always be possible to reset everything or reflash the firmware to its factory state, no matter how screwed up the software on board is. Otherwise there would be no way to fix the phone in the event of catastrophic random data corruption (which can theoretically happen on any device, whether it’s been hacked on or not). I can think of a few reasons why the software might actually become unrecoverably corrupted, but none of them really make any sense from a technical or design perspective.
    1. The SIM unlock changes the baseboard (the modem) on the phone substantially, so one could make the argument that the new firmware isn’t overwriting the baseboard file(s), and only overwrites the files it expects to have to change. But given the size of the version 1.1.1 firmware (154 MB) and the fact that a full restore (which should replace everything, every time) doesn’t bring the phone back to a functioning state, this is unlikely.
    2. Then again, some people running firmware 1.0.x have reported being able to run full restores on iPhones that have been SIM unlocked without having to unlock them again, so maybe iTunes doesn’t replace everything. If this is the case, though, calling the reset option in iTunes a restore is disingenuous, as it obviously doesn’t restore everything to factory condition. Likewise, saying the phone is irreparable in this scenario is also a lie, as all that is needed is to release an update to iTunes that actually does a full and complete restore. Apple may be doing a piecemeal restore that doesn’t modify files that are expected not to ever be changed by the user (like the baseboard) because it’s a faster technique in terms of execution time, but the fact remains that catastrophic data corruption could theoretically trash everything, and a full and complete restore option needs to be available.
    3. Having said that, a device’s hardware could become irreversibly misconfigured if a setting is changed that both (a) causes erroneous behavior and (b) locks out future changes. This is the computer equivalent of locking one’s keys in one’s car. In this scenario, Apple is the only locksmith in town, and they’ve already said they’re not going to help you. But the question remains, if the SIM unlock just modifies the software modem, how can that possibly make a full restore impossible? My best guess is that prior to the restore, the firmware installer is looking at the iPhone and trying to verify, somehow, that it is a supported device. The baseboard has been modified, so it fails verification, and iTunes refuses to do a restore because the baseboard modem is “damaged” in comparison to what it is expecting to find. But again, this makes zero sense, because a damaged baseboard (again, via some sort of data corruption) would be the perfect reason to attempt a full restore.

Given all that, assuming again that apple is making no deliberate attempt to sabotage unlocked phones (because this would be illegal), I can only conclude that Apple’s iPhone team was incredibly overconfident about the degree to which an iPhone’s software cannot be corrupted, and instead of choosing to implement a full and complete restore , implemented a restore procedure that replaced only those files the engineers thought users might somehow damage, and left alone core components (like the baseboard software modem) under the assumption they were somehow untouchable. A very bad design decision in general, if true. This is totally a guess, but it’s where my logic takes me given the evidence I’ve been presented. To my knowledge, the 1.1.1 firmware has not yet been decrypted by the iPhone Dev Team so that its individual files can be examined (by default firmware is encrypted so that its innards are hidden away; a magical black box that makes the handset work somehow). Once it has been decrypted, I would be very interested to see if the baseboard has been modified from version 1.0.2 of the firmware. If it has not, that would actually be a bit of evidence for my hypothesis, as the 1.1.1 firmware installer would have no reason to replace a file it believes not to have been changed. SIM unlock software must be modified for each version of the firmware that changes the software modem, so it makes since that 1.1.1 firmware attempting to operate with a modified version of the 1.0.2 firmware would choke and die. And if the restore fails to replace the baseboard, there’s no fixing it, at least until the iPhone Dev Team figures out how to get back into the iPhone file system (something the current firmware locks them out of doing, but that they could do before) and replace the damaged files.

Again, the above paragraph is completely hypothetical, but I feel pretty confident about it given the information available. If I’m completely wrong, though, I won’t be surprised. The iPhone is a complex system, and I’m operating off limited information, logic, and instinct.

I had planned to talk about the state of 3rd party applications on the iPhone, but this post is long enough. Until next time.

[tags]apple, iphone, apple iphone, unlocking, cell phone unlocking, unlock, cell phone unlock, sim, sim unlock, sim unlocking, warranties, warranty, iphone dev team, iphone dev[/tags]

Sharks are Irrelevant

Forces in Milwaukee wish to erect a bronze statue of The Fonz. I think I speak for all of us when I say, “Aaaay!”

[tags]fonz, the fonz, fonzie, happy days, fonzarelli, arthur fonzarelli, bronze, statue, bronze statue, milwaukee[/tags]

The Power of Words: A Little Miss Sunshine Ramble

I just watched Little Miss Sunshine again. I really love this movie, and as happens, the more I watch it the more little things I notice that make me go, “Oh, that’s very subtle and interestingly cool.” Today, as I was watching, I noticed a link between the sequence of events leading up to the grandfather’s death that had previously escaped my notice, and it really made me stop and think. I shall now share my rambling with you, my adoring subjects readers. Behind a cut for spoilers, of course.

[tags]little miss sunshine, edwin hoover, olive hoover, richard hoover, subtext[/tags]

Continue reading ‘The Power of Words: A Little Miss Sunshine Ramble’

Long Live the Legion

I never really got into The Legion of Superheroes comic book series, in any of its incarnations, through no fault of its own. It’s just…some of the set up turned me off. I like to fall in love with characters and get attached to them, and that’s just hard to do with a series that’s got dozens and dozens of heroes, at least in book form. It made casual reading difficult for me, because every time I tried to pick up an issue and get into it, I’d not recognize half the characters. And finally, I think one of the things that really turned me off was the idea that it was the 30th/31st century, which meant that all the regular DCU heroes I loved were dust on the wind. The idea of superheroes aging into their twilight is a major turnoff for me, and one of the reasons I never really loved Batman Beyond, even if it did have its moments.

Having said that, I’ve caught the last few eps of the new Legion TV Series, and I’m really digging it. It takes a JLU-style approach of a core cast that makes regular appearances along with guest-star Legionnaires, which keeps me from feeling overwhelmed, and there’s not 50+ years of continuity to get bogged down in. In short, it’s accessible for the casual viewer, which I count myself as even though I’m neck deep in the mainline DCU. It’s also a lot of fun, so I don’t consciously dwell on the fact that it’s the 4th millinium and all my favorite heroes are dead. Most of all, though, it’s a really character driven show and even the bit-player heroes are given enough depth and handled with enough seriousness that I can’t help getting attached to them. To the point, even, that I wish some of them could be pulled into the mainline DCU, because I want to see them played off their 20th century predecessors, and their animated versions are just so much less screwed up and weighted down than their comic counterparts. Brainiac 5 and Tim Drake (before the canon screwed him up). Secret and Triplicate Girl. Bart Allen and Matter Eater Lad. Triplicate Girl and Killa Nilla (this is not a typo). The list goes on, and gets weirder, because I’m wicked nuts. These interactions would rule, and I can say that secure in the knowledge that it’s not just my crossover kink egging me on.

I include now a brief list of a few of my favorite Legionnaires, in no particular order. I should note that I’ve researched in depth their comic counterparts, and can say for certain if the comics had been my sole introduction to these people, I would not now be their lifelong fan, because wowzers, the angst. Not to say I don’t like those who aren’t listed here: I in fact think Timber Wolf rocks, but I’m trying to focus on those who aren’t part of the core team or are in other ways unique.

Because I realize some of my readers may already be bored to tears, the rest of this entry is ensconced underneath a cut.
For those who go on, be aware there are some very slight spoilers ahead. I try to keep them as vague as possible.

[tags]dc comics, legion of superheroes, losh, dcu, batman beyond, justice league unlimited, jlu, brainiac 5, querl dox, robin, tim drake, secret, the secret, greta hayes, the flash, kid flash, bart allen, triplicate girl, luornu durgo, timber wolf, brin londo, matter-eater lad, matter eater lad, tenzil kem, squirrel girl, doreen green, ferro lad, ferro, andrew nolan[/tags]

Continue reading ‘Long Live the Legion’

This is Why No One Trusts the Bush Administration on Iraq

For the last several months, I have held off any serious discussion of the Iraq War in this space because I am firmly in the camp that it needs to end yesterday, and prolonging it without any real change in plans or discrete goals isn’t just lunacy, but amounts to an almost criminal waste of lives and treasure for a failed policy. I seem to share this opinion with a great majority of the American public, and more eloquent, informed people than me have been quite active on television, radio, and the web expounding upon it. Talking about it endlessly myself seemed like beating a dead horse. But recent developments and decisions by the Bush Administration combined with Democrats’ paralysis in Congress (in all fairness due to a razor thin majority that’s just too small to really push things) have reminded me that, in fact, some zombie horses do deserve to get the tar kicked out of them. As hardheaded as the current White House is I can’t say raising public awareness will lead to tangible results in the absence of a strong Congressional anti-war majority, but it sure can’t hurt. To quote the fictitious President Andrew Shepherd in The American President, America is “advanced citizenship. You’ve gotta want it bad.” Making this nation work for you means taking an active interest in what’s going on here and elsewhere in the world, being well-informed, and being willing to think critically about issues, even when they’re complex. If all you want is diametrically opposed, oversimplified thirty second sound-bytes that turn political analysis into an exercise in frustration and political debate into something more resembling the Jerry Springer Show because you like it for entertainment, you’re not really interested in being truly involved in the direction of this country, and in a democratic republic that is a sad and potentially disasterous thing indeed.

At the very least, I more and more feel the need to speak occasionally to settle my own mind, and that’s what spurred the writing of this message. I am, quite frankly, appalled at the arrogance of the current Administration in thinking it could pass off the recent recommendations to withdraw the surge-level troops (about 30000) as a new policy. This is a lie. The surge was meant to be a temporary increase, primarily in Baghdad, to stabilize things long enough for the Iraqi Parliament to consolidate the political system and make the government functional. The Iraqi government has been on vacation most of the summer, and this political progress has largely not happened. Now the US military needs to pull the troops out not because of any specific strategic changes, but because having them in Iraq indefinitely is impossible because it puts too much of stairn on the entire apparatus of the armed forces. If they weren’t pulled out, the entire system would shortly begin to collapse. And yes, I suppose I’m also appalled that the citizens of this country, and the Congress, do not in larger, louder majorities demand to know why the surge is considered successful when political reconciliation hasn’t progressed in any meaningful fashion.

It hasn’t been so long since General David Petraeus’ report to Congress, replete with very nice charts and graphs and statistical ninjutsu that made things in Iraq look very positive indeed (not that most people bought it*), that the situation should have had any time to change significantly. Yet, according to a Pentagon report released September 17:

“The security environment in southern Iraq took a notable turn for the worse in August” with the assassination of two governors, said the report, which covers June through August. “There may be retaliation and an increase in intra-Shi’a violence throughout the South,” it said, whereas previously the violence was centered in the main southern city of Basra. 

I would dearly love to be able to link directly to this report, but I don’t know where to find it, and The Washington Post doesn’t provide a link. The closest thing I could find was this one from September 14, but that’s not the same thing. If anyone knows where the newer report can be found, I’d like to be able to link to it here.

The Washington Post article also contains a few interesting comments about Iran, which I’m not going to go into here because that’s a whole other kettle of fish. At least a lot less people are trigger happy this time around. Meanwhile, the potential pitfalls of having private security firms so heavily involved in the Iraqi occupation are on display this week. Blackwater USA has had its operating license revoked by the Iraqi Parliament after a violent shootout that left eight dead and wounded thirteen. In addition, there is some confusion over just what started the incident. Blackwater and the State Department say there was an attack of some sort, whereas many bystanders report everything happened in reaction to a car bombing. The US is apparently trying to smooth things over, but Iraq has promised a criminal investigation and I wouldn’t be surprised if they try to get Blackwater expelled from the country completely. Let’s see if the State Department lets them.

In short, things in Iraq are fabulous as usual.

In the spirit of raising awareness about casuality levels, and because I don’t think the information is publicized enough by the mainstream media, I will very shortly after making this post add a pair of widgets obtained from The Washington Post to this blog listing not only US causalities in Iraq, but Iraqi civilian casualities as well. I encourage others to do the same, because it’s not just about dead American soldiers–it’s about the maimed soldiers, and thousands upon thousands of civilian casualities. (It’s also rather difficult to look at the numbers and then listen to President Bush talk about how the US is part of a larger coalition in Iraq, when our partners have collectively sustained, as I write this, 298 casualties. If the President wants to wage war in Iraq, he should at least have the decency to admit that it’s our war, and this “multinational force” business is little more than a sham. A pathetic, sick, kind of sham used to confuse and mislead the citizenry into thinking we’re really part of some larger, internationally supported effort, while we suffer the overwhelming majority of loss of life (and quality of life, for wounded veterans) and money, and damage to military infrastructure that will take decades to recover from.

Is it 2009 yet?

*If you’re really interested in the polling data on the reaction to General Petraeus, Pew Research makes available the full analysis as PDF.

[tags]iraq, war, iraq war, troop surge, surge, politics, bush administration, president bush, bush, george w bush, george bush, petraeus, general petraeus, general david petraeus, iran, blackwater, blackwater usa, blackwater security, casualties, widgets[/tags]

More Apple Ramblings

I found a couple other things on the Mac continent of the blogosphere today, and I wanted to share them. Jason Fry over at The Wall Street Journal recently posted this article about the upswing in Mac adoption he’s witnessed, and even though it’s anecdotal evidence, I still find it interesting. There are of course the few emails included from those staying with Windows, but that’s to be expected.

Living in Dallas, I’m of course a huge fan of the Mavericks basketball team, especially given that they no longer blow since being purchased by Mark Cuban, who is an interesting personality, to say the least. So i was especially amused to see that Mr Cuban recently switched to the Mac.

Interesting. I wonder how much mileage I would get trying to get people to switch if I told them it was “good enough for Mark Cuban?” Probably depends on the setting.

[tags]mark cuban, apple, mac, macintosh, macs, mavericks, dallas mavericks[/tags]

More iPhone News

Unlocking, Part Deux

I suppose I must admit that I’m rambling about the iPhone more and more lately because since the price dropped, it’s become a device I could see myself owning one day, as opposed to an “oh, wow, that’s really nifty but I can’t even come close to justifying the cost” gadget. (And by the time I’m actually ready to buy a new cell phone in 2009, it’ll no doubt be even cheaper.)

In my previous post on the subject, I noted that the method covered by Macworld, involving lots of command line manipulations, was by no means an easy process. That’s changed now, as the iPhone Dev Team has announced a version of their software with a graphical user interface. Just put the application on your iPhone, press the unlock button, and in 3-5 minutes you should have a working, totally unlocked device. Nifty. The Geek Factor for doing the unlock is probably, in my estimation, now a 2/10. Before I would’ve said it was an 8/10, for sure. Too much command line kung fu that could easily go wrong.

A Touch of Music

The recently announced (but not yet shipping) iPod touch (no, that’s not a capitalization error) is being marketted as an iPhone without the phone. It’s still got Wifi, so you can use it to surf the web wherever wireless internet is available. Starbucks, for example. Apple and Starbucks would both really like it if you took your iPod touch there. Frequently.

That being said, there are some important differences between the iPhone and the iPod touch that prospective buyers of either device should be aware of. They are summed up quite nicely at iProng. As a sidenote–and this is purely my own speculation, backed up by nothing more than my own musings as I stared entranced into the swirling spices of my Thai Red Curry with Beef on Friday–note that the iPod touch comes in two capacities, 8 and 16 GB, whereas the iPhone only comes in 8 GB. I strongly suspect the iPhone price drop was in preparation for the launch of a 16 GB model for perhaps $100-$150 dollars more. I’m guessing the only reason we haven’t yet seen such a device is because of a shortage of available 16 GB NAND flash, the storage medium inside these devices. Apple wouldn’t roll out a product just to have to deal with constant supply problems.

The Rebate

Much has been made of the entire price-drop-rebate fiasco regarding the iPhone. Too much, in all likelihood. Most sane people wouldn’t get terribly upset that technology gets faster and cheaper. Rather than griping about it en masse, those who purchased it and felt they had been wronged should have persued their options. It’s standard Apple policy to refund the difference of a price drop within fourteen days of purchase, and most major credit cards offer some form of price protection. If neither price protection nor the Apple 14 day guarantee were available, well, that is certainly unfortunate, but it’s the nature of technology. When I bought my current laptop, a model with the same form factor, a faster processor, more memory, and faster USB connectors was announced within a month–for the same amount of money. That kinda thing–more features for the same amount of money–is arguably more galling than a price drop on existing tech. I was bummed, sure, but these things happen in the technology industry. It’s inevitable.

My bottom line, I guess: be comfortable with your tech purchases. A newer, faster, better, cheaper product will come out, whether it’s computers or MP3 players or toaster ovens. But when you go to buy something, you should be pleased with what you’re getting, happy enough with what you’re getting, that you won’t care. The device you’ve just bought will be enough for your needs (or possibly more than enough), so it’s okay that something new arrived. If you think something costs too much money, or you’re afraid something brand new is about to come out immediately, hold off. My strategy for this, as an Apple user, is simple. If something new is supposedly coming in a set amount of time that will replace the thing you want to buy, wait and see if it actually materializes. Never buy right before Apple special events, be they scheduled annually or announced specifically. If a new piece of software from Apple is coming in a short amount of time (like Leapord, due the end of October) hold off on your hardware purchase until after it’s out, so the software will be bundled with your new hardware. These principles apply equally well to other tech areas, though I’ll admit I only actively use a calendar to plan purchases when it comes to Apple products.

Having said all that, two caveats. First, if you really need something now, get it now. Your new laptop that does everything you need and more will not stop being awesome because something new came out. Sure, the new thing may be more awesome, but odds are you’ve already got more awesome than you will really need for a long time to come. Second, you’ll be a happier consumer if you put a little planning into your purchases and less likely to get sideswiped with new products a month or two after you buy something, but occasionally, despite your best efforts, you will get bitten by something like this iPhone price drop. When it happens, pursue whatever fiscal compensation you can through price matching, but remember that companies that sell things do so to make money. They are, in general, not out to screw you, but they certainly won’t hesitate to charge the highest price they can for as long as they can. As a consumer, you implicitly agree to the supply/demand arrangement through your purchase, and early adopters always pay more for less.

Apple’s in store rebate was less a concession they had done anything wrong and more a way to get an overly loud minority of fanboys with entitlement complexes and a lack of understanding of basic economics to shut up. In reality, Apple only spends about fifty dollars on an in store rebate for 100 dollars because of wholesale prices, etc., and likely ends up making even more money because having that rebate in your hands makes you a lot more likely to want to buy something that costs over 100 dollars, like a new iPod touch. To reiterate, Apple loses nothing, comes away with good PR for responding so swiftly and decisively to perceived customer outrage, and sucks even more of your money into its coffers.

The paranoid part of me wonders if they planned this the whole time.

[tags]iphone, apple, apple iphone, unlock, iphone unlock, ipod touch, starbucks, rebate, iphone rebate[/tags]