Amazingly Well Done Site: The Vintage Aviator

Vintage

Poking around and viewing hot examples of Drupal sites usually doesn't turn up great design. But I just came across a Drupal site that is so well done, so gorgeous and such a delight to poke around in that I had to pass it along.

The Vintage Aviator is a New Zealand site that has very high production values and a retro design that is evocative of days gone by. From the backgrounds, to typefaces used, to the great photographs, I was impressed, but when I got to the Playing Sopwith and Spitfire video it made me sit straight up and say, "How did they shoot that video!"

Who are these guys? On their site they state, "Our customers are generally private collectors and museums. We are currently building aircraft and overhauling engines for customers in Australia, New Zealand, Europe and the USA." From the quality of all aspects of the imagery, video, representation of the planes and parts, I'll bet they do a lot of business.

It’s a Wonderful Internet

Wonderful

As a fan of the movie It's A Wonderful Life, this fun takeoff on it, It's A Wonderful Internet, is worth the five minutes of going through it (and make sure you use the sliders — like the arrow above — to see the photo change to align to the story elements.

The Internet: one of the things I gave thanks for yesterday!  ;-)

We Need Better Mashup and Dashboard ‘Aggregators’

Mashed
One thing is absolutely crystal clear to even a casual observer of today's Web application space: there are an unprecedented number of phenomenal tools available (many of them free), but unless you want to have 25 tabs open in a browser window, it's pretty challenging to bring them all together in a useful way and coordinate and orchestrate their use.

In the enterprise space, there's been a long running category called composite applications. These were apps that I.T. could create that would bring together disparate business data and application functionality into a new application. Making this easier for enterprise I.T. was a key objective in the portal space, but it never gained the sort of traction everyone expected.

In the Web 2.0 area, composite applications are known as mashups and are the closest thing to a composite application (and some argue these are composite apps) and are at the core of why the internet is a platform and more and more hosted application providers are delivering API's which enable smart developers to pull together chunks of functionality and deliver a different and completely new application (browse over 3,500 mashups here).

But what about startups, small to midsize businesses, agencies and non-profit organizations, who'd like to simply and easily aggregate all of this disparate functionality together in one spot and cannot afford a composite app/mashup development effort?

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No Quick Fix for Automakers

Bigthree

If I’ve learned one thing in my time in past companies, one step away from the executive suite — and now interacting with senior leaders at client companies — is that until you deal with all the moving parts as you move from strategy to tactics yourself, there is no way you can understand.

It’s simple to be a Monday morning quarterback and analyze how things could’ve been done better in the past. It’s even easier to be a blogger putting out a post like this with a bunch of high level recommendations. I love ya Scoble, but you haven’t managed anything bigger than a discount camera store and I’m guessing you haven’t done a major analysis of the automotive value chain, so many who have will undoubtedly think your post is kinda cute.

Like Scoble, my last post was a personal rant about the ‘bailout’ since there is something fundamentally wrong with the automotive business, and is one that certainly needs a complete restructuring (which, to be fair to Scoble, was one of his suggestions) and this overhaul is exactly what a bankruptcy would create.

Few of us can appreciate the magnitude of the problems the big three automakers are facing and a reorganization isn’t going to fix overwhelming systemic problems. Combined with the lead-time necessary to design a new car platform, coordinate and orchestrate the entire supply chain, deliver product through the channel, create a global campaign to launch it and put the car into production, and you have a multi-year change needed at a time when capital isn’t flowing and credit markets remain paralyzed.

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Hey General Motors, Who is John Galt?

Atlas
One of the books that played a role in shaping my thinking in college was Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged. It's basic premise is that of rational self interest. Rand portrays independent achievers as ones whose achievements are interfered with by the state, and she argues that any state intervention — be it fascism, socialism or communism — is fatally flawed from the get-go.

I was always troubled by the completely unfettered freedom she espoused as a necessity, in the same way that free markets, left completely unregulated, never made sense to me. Though both are ideas which I believe we should aspire to (rather than a welfare state or other non-motivating policies).

With respect to where we are in financial markets, housing and now the automakers, if there's not catastrophic downside to risk taking, then we might as well risk it all, every time, right?

I must admit my wife and I are really pissed off having made decisions NOT to leverage over the past several years, pay off the house, save, invest for our retirement, and position ourselves well for the future. Others I know (many others) took out huge second mortgages to take vacations or buy cars, condos, HDTV's or boats. Some bought their McMansion with a huge jumbo mortgage, and now are under water in value, owing more on it than it's worth and are hoping for a governmental loan restructuring.

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Pinnacle TV for Mac: A Great Gift

PinnacleIn this down economy, people have been asking me (since I have a reputation as a gadget freak) what would be great gifts for this holiday season and would be ones with "a high geek factor and a low price."

The Flip Mino HD has been one I've recommended at $229 as has this Asus netbook at $329.

Usually I've rarely had good luck with low-end products that purport to do big things that more expensive gear performs, but the two above are exceptions to that rule.  So I was naturally skeptical when the box arrived for me to evaluate the $129 Pinnacle TV for Mac HD USB mini stick (more info on it here).

I opened it up, installed the software, and waited the 15 minutes or so that it took to seek out all the possible stations in my area the included antenna could pick up. To say that I was stunned, surprised and delighted when suddenly a gorgeous high definition TV station appeared on my Apple 24" Cinema display, would be doing this little product a disservice!

Every available over-the-air station worked flawlessly and it was easy to switch back-n-forth between channels. As I fooled around with it and viewed some content, I realized how much I would've loved having this device when the debates were going on (too often I had stuff to do at my desk and could've had live TV running watching them, instead of having to record the first half and watch it later).

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Something is tugging at our universe!

Newuniverse
Five years ago, I was reading an article in Scientific American (which I can no longer find), that was fascinating to me since I often contemplate the heavens and wonder what's out there.

The article described a theory that black holes — which suck in all light and matter around them and collapse into a massively heavy pinpoint — actually got to a density that then caused an explosion "out the back". The theory was that this explosion was a "big bang" that created a new universe, and the continued sucking in of light and matter from our universe continued to make that universe expand (similar to our own accelerating universe).

For many years I've been intrigued with Hugh Everett III's ridiculed concept of the many-worlds interpretation from which this theory of new universe creation sprang. His many-worlds theory claimed to resolve all the "paradoxes" of quantum theory since every possible outcome to every event defines or exists in its own "history" or "world." In layman's terms, this means that there is a very large, perhaps infinite, number of universes and that everything that could possibly happen in our universe (but doesn't) does happen in some other universe(s).

A bunch of crap? Everett's peers thought so and he was so ridiculed that he got his PhD, left physics, and became a defense analyst and consultant (and a multimillionaire so there's money in being bullied!).

Now comes word he may have been on to something since a study has determined that there are Unknown "Structures" Tugging at Our Universe.

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CNN Hologram: “Cheesy Tech” That Added No Value

CNN-hologram

While I'm a huge fan of taking technology risks, trying stuff out and moving forward on cutting edge innovation, sometimes it's so obvious that something adds no value, is done just for eye candy effect, and is laughingly cheesy that it has to be called out (and I'll wager Saturday Night Live will be bring us a skit on this just like they did with this one about the giant touch screen maps, another eye candy technology that's actually pretty useful for "what if's" and other analysis on the fly).

CNN's bringing in Jessica Yellin via hologram is last night's best "cheesy tech" example and is the antithesis of applying technology in a useful manner. When a TV screen cutaway is perfectly acceptable — and when some hologram thingy is so new and useless that it makes whatever is coming out of the person's mouth irrelevant — that's a no value addition.

Here's a brief snippet with Ms. Yellin describing the (clearly expensive) 35 HiDef cameras that had to be used to deliver her holographic presence:

Lessons From Our First “Social Media” President

Obama-app
The enormity of the shift that occurred last night is still sinking in. Feeling the spirit of millions that have been moved and are primed to tap into vision and get behind this new leader was certainly profound. Ironically, it wasn’t until I saw a man in a live TV shot last night whom I’ve had zero affinity for in the past — the Reverend Jesse Jackson — shedding tears in Chicago’s Grant Park in the midst of tens of thousands of others, did it sink in how amazing this was for the African-American community.

Not that I’ve been unaware of Obama’s black 50%, but it’s been totally irrelevant since I, like more of us than ever before, realize that we’re all connected and in this together. What’s mattered to me is his vision, my belief in his intention for change, his certain inclusion of everyone, a refreshing intelligence, and the world-class thought leaders he’s already brought close to him as he crafts strategy.

What will be hyper-analyzed over the next several months, however, is that the Obama campaign leveraged the internet, tapped into the social media zeitgeist, and engaged with people in ways never before possible (and because so many of us are already connected with social media), and there are key lessons here for every company, organization, movement or individual wanting to sell, build brands, move an agenda forward, or build an ecosystem.

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How the Internet Has Changed This Election

IVoted
Out walking the dog this morning at 5:45am, I had my nose pressed against the glass of my iPhone as I read the New York Times and this article about how the fundamentals of running for president have changed dramatically:

“I think we’ll be analyzing this election for years as a seminal, transformative race,” said Mark McKinnon, a senior adviser to President Bush’s campaigns in 2000 and 2004. “The year campaigns leveraged the Internet in ways never imagined. The year we went to warp speed. The year the paradigm got turned upside down and truly became bottom up instead of top down.”

To a considerable extent, Republicans and Democrats say, this is a result of the way that the Obama campaign sought to understand and harness the Internet (and other forms of so-called new media) to organize supporters and to reach voters who no longer rely primarily on information from newspapers and television. The platforms included YouTube, which did not exist in 2004, and the cellphone text messages that the campaign was sending out to supporters on Monday to remind them to vote.

This morning’s voting experience was seamless, easy and fun. Not only was it my 20 year old daughter’s first presidential election, even she found the stakes to be so high that she did everything she could to rearrange her schedule to be with her mom and I at our polling place this morning.

EP_PollSeeing the line outside in 50+ degree weather, election officials even walked down the line with a tray of cookies and rolls and mentioned there was hot coffee inside. People were orderly, subdued, clearly excited, and the line moved without a hitch. We arrived at 7:15am and walked out at 7:58am, and the line was already down to 25 people or so as we departed.

I immediately got on the Twitter Vote Report iPhone application (more about the app here) and reported my results, and then did so with the MNVotes Twitter hash tag (#mnvotes).

Now in my office at my computer, I am absolutely stunned with something I just came across at this post, “The Ultimate Guide to Live Election Coverage” by Liz Gannes at NewTeeVee, and thought I’d add it to my post so you can have these resources at your fingertips today. While I knew about Twitter Vote Report and our own Minnesota site The UpTake, most of the others Ms. Gannes lists I was not aware of and encourage you to go read the post.

For my wife and I, much of our constant overview information came from cable and network television, newspapers and discussions with friends and family (and the sound-bite back-n-forth via Twitter with folks). Most of my study of the issues could only occur via the internet, since I took the opportunity to drill-down on information when I didn’t understand something, action not possible with filtered snippets on television, goofy commercials or even in most magazine or newspaper articles. What an amazing time, an incredible election, and I expect today is a tipping point we’ll never forget.