Apple’s personal production environment…

appleThough I use Windows XP and Linux at home, my preferred platform is Mac OS X. The primary reason I use it — and have since it’s intro in 1984 — has been how incredibly well everything works together. Today there are no viruses or spyware, and Apple’s guidelines for developers mean applications work seamlessly under a common set of user interface rules just like they have since the beginning.

Applications ‘behave’ the way I want and expect them to and the manipulation of media is considerably more elegant than on Windows or Linux. I’m constantly struck by how much “bit twiddling” is required on these two platforms — twiddling that is remarkably minimized or absent on the Mac. With Mac OS X built on top of and based upon unix (BSD and the Mach kernel) it has the robustness of a modern operating system. Delightfully, Apple has married an extremely functional and elegant user interface on top of these unix underpinnings (a friend told me, “..it’s like Linux but with a great user interface and tons of cool apps”).

Apple’s Tuesday announcement of the next wave of products (iPod shuffle, Mac mini, iLife and iWork) are allowing Apple to leverage the momentum they’ve achieved with the iPod. But to me, the really interesting aspect of these announcement have been how the software has taken the integration and seamlessness in Mac OS X to the next level.

Music and photos are instantly available with your word processor (Pages), presentation program (Keynote) and iMovie (now with High Definition editing capability). What really tripped-my-trigger was that the new ‘iWorks’ version of Keynote allows output to Macromedia’s Flash standard! If you had any idea the hoops I’ve jumped through to do simple Flash animations (without investing money and huge effort in to learning Macromedia’s monolithic tools) you’d understand my enthusiasm.

This Steve Gillmor article pulls together some of the possibilities behind these announcements with a focus on the iPod and podcasting and the even more powerful capability of people producing their own radio shows and much more.

I’ve not fully digested all of this yet…but when I think about the kids *I* know that are doing cool things with iMovie and GarageBand producing incredibly good stuff with a home or school Mac, I get really jazzed and think “we ain’t seen nothin’ yet.”

Open Source: Standing on the Shoulders of Giants

It is always so validating when accomplished, smart people express thoughts about a topic that are 100% in line with your own. Mitch Kapor posted about this question: “Does the open source model apply beyond software?”

For the last two years I’ve been observing and thinking about what’s going on with people and organizations trying to figure out how to embrace (or just deal with) Open Source as a business model. Besides the obvious model (software) that we all know about, two key examples of an atypical approach to “open sourcing” value have been these most recently visible examples:

  1. MIT Open CourseWare initiative
  2. Slashdot | Open Source Biology Initiative

When I think of the power of the open source model and the application of network effects providing focus, energy and momentum behind areas that have been “open sourced”, I become even more enthused about this paradigm shift.

In a strange sort of way and as I implied in one of my earlier posts entitled, “The Internet as our Collective Consciousness”, Slashdot is a great example of simply providing a forum for really smart, opinionated, propellerheads to learn about and weigh in on the hot geek topic of the moment. I like to think about Slashdot as “open source conversations”. I couldn’t find the post on Slashdot, but some time ago a Dad who had a handicapped son posted a plea to the Slashdot community describing his son’s physical challenge and asking for pointers to web sites and thoughts about adaptive technologies for his little guy.

The explosion of help and recommendations still sends shivers up my spine. Even I learned a lot about what’s available in adaptive technologies and approaches by reading opinions and looking at the web sites recommended by Slashdotters — and the Dad was *really* grateful for all the energy and knowledge provided to him.

This is just one small example, but imagine if this kind of collective energy is focused on an open source initiative of any kind? If done right, the value to everyone of the open source model for software, biology, books, movies, et al, would be proportional to the level of participation amplified by the network called the internet. Instead of everyone making a buck in the process, everyone receives value from which they can leverage for knowledge or other purposes.

In a letter, written by Sir Isaac Newton to fellow scientist Robert Hooke on February, 5th, 1676, Newton modestly claimed that his success had been built on the achievements of others:

“If I have seen further than others, it is because I was standing on the shoulders of giants.”

Open source models (for more than just software) hold the promise of letting the world stand on the shoulders of giants and leverage each other and one another’s knowledge in new and profound ways..

Missing Link: Milky Way to the Big Bang

pia05988Australian astronomers have discovered the so-called missing link that relates modern galaxies such as the Milky Way to the Big Bang that created the universe almost 14 billion years ago.

“The project – called the two-degree field galaxy Redshift survey – involved mapping the three dimensional distribution in space of 220,000 galaxies, using complex astronomical instruments at the Anglo-Australian telescope in north-western New South Wales.”

220,000 galaxies!?! Regardless of how often I think about the vastness of our universe, the number of galaxies — and stars within them and planets circling each of those billions of stars — makes me continue to contemplate the unlikely possibility God placed only us in the universe.

In a Scientific American article last year it suggested that the big bang was not the origin of the universe but simply the outcome of a preexisting state. Though I cannot remember all details of this article, I do remember one theory that our universe — and its continuing expanding state — could’ve been the result of our universe being spawned out of “the back end” of a black hole.

What that means is in some *other* universe, light and matter get sucked in to a black hole. Then there is an explosion (a big bang) blowing the super condensed matter out behind it thus creating a new universe in some other dimension. Possibly there are then an infinite number of universes being born out of every black hole. Pretty cool theory, heh?

Though when I get all mystical and cosmic thinking big thoughts about our infinite universe, God and the meaning of life, I realize that there is probably some guy, in some other universe, sitting in his underwear right this minute watching their version of The Simpsons.

Two students develop a tsunami warning system

tsunamiThis is pretty cool: two students read a column by Robert X. Cringely about how to build a tsunami warning system in less than a month using data already available on the internet. All that had to be done is to assemble pieces-n-parts together in a deliverable application.

So these two students built a tsunami warning application with a toolset called Konfabulator. This innovative offering facilitates rapid coding of mini-applications called Widgets, and enables them to be run on an internet-connected Windows or Macintosh PC.

Undoubtedly early warning systems like this are but one small step in making a notification infrastructure a reality in the nations impacted by last month’s devastating tsunami. With warning systems hopefully the next tsunami will be destructive only for property, not people.

Tony & Jimmy

I trust until proven otherwise…unless it’s so blatantly obvious that someone might be worthy of further scrutiny. Unless my Blackberry charger shows up some time this week, I’ll have to add two young New Yorker’s named Tony & Jimmy to my short list of untrustworthy souls.

My buddy and I shared a cab Friday from the CES convention center back to our hotel with these two and talked about technology and XM radio (Jimmy had the Delphi XM handheld and there was a 50% off CES special he told us about). Seems Tony’s Blackberry charger tip had fallen apart and he was bummed he’d run out of mobile phone charge with two days left at the show. Since I had a travel charger along — and wouldn’t need to charge my phone until late Saturday — I thought I’d be a good guy and lend it to Tony. I gave Tony my card so he’d have my name. All I asked is that he charge his phone overnight and drop my charger in an envelope Saturday at the Bell desk so I could pick it up.

As the two of them walked away when we got to the hotel, I had an inkling I’d never see it again. Whaddya think happened?

Consumer Electronics Show — My Day 2

home_theatreWhile not a thorough booth-by-booth analysis of the CES show in two days, I nonetheless saw about 80% of what there was to see and got a pretty good feel for the major themes (home theatre was the big story), saw some cool gadgets and learned some things.

LCD, plasma and projection TV’s were everywhere. In fact, Samsung showed “The World’s Largest Plasma TV” in their booth at 102″. Like I talked about in my post below from yesterday’s visit to CES, there seems to be quite a bit of discussion and design around finding ways to hang these TV’s or place them in, on or around furniture. Seems to me a 102″ TV would be a bit dominant in the old family room!

My bride (Michelle Lamb) forecasts trends for the home furnishings industry. While discussing my attending this trade show, she was curious about what the “color story” might be at CES. If you like your consumer electronics in black and silver — you’re all set. There was only one major manufacturer of any kind — Marantz — that was showing a slight variation and it was a champagne color. Though there was color in CD, DVD players as well as a few other offerings (mainly from non-brand Korean vendors), the largest vendors did not show product that was other than black and silver.

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Consumer Electronics Show

cesMany years ago I used to regularly attend the Consumer Electronics Show (CES). Held in Las Vegas every January and again in Chicago in June, it was the place for the trade to experience the products manufacturer’s hoped consumers would covet.

Now with only one show in Las Vegas in January, it’s much different. Especially now that Comdex is no longer. So coming out here for CES this year has caused me to remember the shows I attended in the past — but more so how dramatically CES has changed (as well as Las Vegas itself).

While the blog Engadget is doing a great job showcasing the innovation being displayed at CES — and I’ve only seen 25% of the floor thus far — my first days observations are these:

  • The width of plasma TV’s are causing vendors of furniture (mostly non-mainstream vendors) to innovative with wall units with new, wide openings for these TV’s, furniture pieces where the flat panel TV’s rise up out of the piece, and even casual chairs for watching movies
  • The iPod and accessories for it are everywhere. One company had an in-wall, iPod docking station with an in-wall controller for playing the audio on your iPod in your home. Another (Monster) showed several iPod accessories including the iCruze which replaces a CD changer allowing the iPod to be used within any car already equipped with a CD changer
  • A Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) company (BroadVoice) has, in my mind, hit the sweet spot of really cheap and really fully featured internet telephony. For example, they’re offering unlimited in the U.S. for $9.95; unlimited world for $19.95 (ahh…most of the world); and unlimited world plus for $24.95 (basically everywhere). They also have a host of other features.
  • Bluetooth, USB and other protocols/standards had numerous innovative products utilizing them
  • One of THE most interesting startup companies (with a nice presence too) was Control4. These guys are using open standards and protocols (based on Linux and TCP/IP) offering a series of products and a platform on which to build products and services for automating the home. Why was this so interesting? Others like X10 and SmartHome’s Insteon are either old protocols or proprietary ones. Open standards and protocols = good. Proprietary = bad (unless you’re the troll living under the bridge collecting tolls (i.e., license fees) from all the passersby).

There’s a lot more but not much that was jaw dropping. If it hadn’t been for today’s rain, I doubt my colleague and I would’ve ducked in to the innovation area and stumbled upon some pretty fun stuff like these really tiny USB thumb drives called iDisks. (…and they are *really* tiny).

WiFi on the frozen tundra

Whoever said that Minnesota is just "fly-over" country (and that all we do up here is freeze our butts off) should note these two developments:

  • Minnesota Public Radio reports on a proposal to provide universal WiFi access in St Paul.
  • CNN reports on Chaska, MN rolling out wireless broadband for its citizens.

With Voice over IP (VoIP) companies like  Vonage rolling out a WiFi phone, the time of free urban wireless telephony (and, of course, internet access) is at hand.

Now if I could just have always on internet in my car…

Open Source Software to Accelerate?

One of the key obstacles for acceptance of Open Source Software (OSS) — like Linux, Open Office, and many of the other 93,000+ OSS projects displayed on the OSS site SourceForge — has been the lack of support for this software.

I.T. leaders have told me things in the past like, “So what am I gonna do if I adopt an OSS application, operating system or application server and I have a problem with it. Send an email to the ‘community’? I’ve got to have a vendor to lean on.”

Today there’s an acceleration in companies (such as IBM & HP) supporting either an open source stack (web, application servers; database, etc.). In addition, Ray Lane (former #2 at Oracle) along with Kim Polese (former CEO of Marimba) have started a new company called SpikeSource to support the whole enchilada (the entire OSS stack).

So if you’re a company that’s chosen any OSS offering, now there’s a place to turn to for technical and user support. This is a big deal on the way to OSS acceptance. It’s going to get more interesting going forward.

What does this blogging phenomena mean?

Thinking about the implications of the blogosphere is staggering. Some believe it is changing the face of journalism, others a fun way to express oneself, and still others ways of delivering video, audio and other media within their blogs.

Regardless of your point of view one thing is clear: blogging is accelerating.

Today the Pew Internet & American Life Project on the “Blogosphere” released a study that said, “8 million American adults say they have created blogs; blog readership jumped 58% in 2004 and now stands at 27% of internet users; 5% of internet users say they use RSS aggregators or XML readers to get the news and other information delivered from blogs and content-rich Web sites as it is posted online; and 12% of internet users have posted comments or other material on blogs. Still, 62% of internet users do not know what a blog is.”