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Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on August 6, 2009 at 11:50 pm

Conviction without experience makes for harshness.” -Flannery O’Connor

Goodbye HTC/Windows Mobile, Hello Blackberry Storm (Review)

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on August 4, 2009 at 3:38 pm

I recently traded in an HTC Vogue on Verizon for a Blackberry Storm. The Vogue was a very flexible/capable phone, with dozens of fun and useful applications for its Windows Mobile platform, but had four painful problems which I think are fairly common across the entire HTC/Windows Mobile line:

1) It was utterly unreliable. Three or four times every month friends and family would call me, hear rings, and leave voicemails. The phone would be sitting next to me at home, plugged in, powered on, connected (3 bars) and never ring. Checking my phone later, I would discover a new voicemail — but no record of the call in the call log.

2) The UI was atrocious. The best test for a UI is the wife test: Every time my wife had to use my phone in a pinch — she would scream in frustration as she couldn’t access common functions (such as the dialer) or couldn’t enter text accurately on the virtual keyboard. Windows Mobile is a disaster on touchphones. Eventually, I was able to workaround this issue by installing SPB’s Mobile Shell which is a remarkable product which Microsoft should buy and integrate.

3) GPS performance was horrible. Obtaining a GPS lock in Google Maps took 3-5 minutes where you had to remain completely stationary and away from tall buildings. You could drive (moving) for miles and never obtain a lock. It was so frustrating being lost/late and unable to obtain a fix. There was not–as far as I could tell–any “Assisted GPS” which uses cell phone tower triangulation to speed up the fix process. Various apps/tweaks which were supposed to improve GPS acquisition had no effect.

4) GPS was locked down. Google Maps, Garmin Mobile, and other applications could not access the internal GPS. About halfway through the life of the phone I decided to “flash” a new ROM onto the phone to remove this restriction. This was a complicated, warranty-breaking process and it was totally ridiculous that I had to go through it.

So, onto the Blackberry Storm! I would’ve preferred an iPhone, however I’m not willing to put up with AT&T’s poor voice coverage just for the sake of a snazzy device. It looked like the Storm was the best touch-based smartphone available on Verizon. It was a scary purchase, because of the thousands of Storm horror stories out there. After four weeks of Storm usage, I’m surprisingly satisfied! A few thoughts:

1) The SurePress click screen is serviceable. Based on peoples comments, I was expecting it to be a nightmare. Occasionally you can’t quite select a button or click where you want to, but 90% of the time it works fine. I do worry about dirt getting under the screen however.

2) The Blackberry browser is serviceable. Again, based on peoples comments, I thought it would be awful. It’s not. It’s a little pokey sometimes, but mostly it works and gets me around mobile-friendly sites without issue. I installed Opera but rarely use it!

3) The memory limitation is a real problem. The Storm has 128MB of memory which acts like “RAM”. The more applications you run concurrently, the less RAM available. Bizarrely, the more applications you install (even if they aren’t running!) — the less RAM available. Very quickly you begin to run low on RAM. When less than 10MB of RAM is available, the Storm begins to crawl. After a reset, I have about 20MB free RAM, by mid-day I’m down to 15MB, and at night I hit 10MB. Two applications make this problem manageable: MeterBerry — which monitors free RAM and notifies you when it drops below 10MB (so you can reset) and QuickPull — which automatically restarts your Blackberry early every morning (e.g. 4am) to clear the RAM out.

4) The camera is excellent! I can’t believe how much better the Storm’s camera is vs. my HTC Vogue. It’s an incredible difference… pictures of text in books and magazines are actually readable! Because of this — I’ve been using Evernote for Blackberry much more than I used Evernote for Windows Mobile.

5) Voice quality is excellent! The Storm is louder and more clear than my Vogue. The speakerphone is good. Thankfully, it doesn’t miss calls either.

6) GPS is amazing! I can’t get over how fast the Storm acquires a lock in Google Maps… 10 seconds at most. I love popping it out on a downtown street corner and knowing exactly where I am.

7) The virtual keyboard is decent. It’s not perfect, but its better than Windows Mobile. The landscape layout really shines. Thankfully, my wife can actually type on it with minimal frustration. I’ve gotten progressively faster in terms of typing speed.

8) Like Windows Mobile, RIM’s OS is not designed for touch devices. You see this in the long drop-down list menus and too-small buttons. RIM has done a *better* job than Microsoft of adopting to touchscreens, but there is definitely more work to be done.

Overall, my Storm experience has been good. Verizon cut the price to $99’s — so it wasn’t expensive either. Clearly, I’ve benefited here by coming to the party late: Early Storm users faced horrendous software/stability bugs with RIM’s OS. Most of those issues have been ironed out at this point. I wouldn’t buy a Storm for my wife, it’s still too rough around the edges, but it’s a great phone for tech savvy who are unwilling to go to AT&T.

jason

The Case For A Four-Day Workweek

Blog Category: Personal, Professional — Blogged by: admin on July 30, 2009 at 4:46 pm

The Case For A Four-Day Workweek - Environment and Energy

How often does Utah, of all places, get mentioned as a hotbed of public-policy innovation? Not often. But, last August, the state carried out a rather novel idea: Shift all government employees to a four-day workweek. No, this wasn’t the French approach. Workers would still put in their 40 hours; they’d just toil in the office for ten hours a day, Monday through Thursday, and then get Friday off. The experiment’s been going on for a year and the results are finally in—the state actually saved a fair bit on energy costs. Scientific American reports…

Bypassing Banks: Peer - to - Peer Lending

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on July 18, 2009 at 12:11 pm

Do peer-to-peer lending sites like Prosper and Lending Club work? - By Ray Fisman - Slate Magazine

On Prosper, the largest of the peer-to-peer sites, the process is a little like eBay-meets-Match.com. Lenders select from among a catalog of prospective borrowers much as singles “shop” an Internet dating site for potential partners. A typical listing includes a personal narrative making a case for the loan and a picture of the borrower. (These pictures often also include kids, puppies, and other images that might tug on a lender’s sympathies.) In addition to this (unverified) information, Prosper lists hard data from borrowers’ credit reports, including past delinquencies, credit lines, and ranges for income and credit rating. Once a desirable borrower is identified, lenders place bids specifying how much they’re willing to lend to a particular borrower and at what interest rate. So if many lenders perceive that a borrower is a good credit risk, he’s likely to get all the money he needs at low rates. High-risk cases will end up paying higher interest rates and may not attract funding at all.

A fascinating article on traffic and commuting:

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on July 18, 2009 at 11:56 am

Excerpt from Critical Mass § SEEDMAGAZINE.COM

A few years ago, Swiss economists Bruno Fey and Alois Stutzer announced the discovery of a new human foible, which they called “the commuters paradox.” They found that when people are choosing where to live, they consistently underestimate the pain of a long commute. This leads people to mistakenly believe that a mansion in the suburbs, with its extra bedroom and sprawling lawn, will make them happier, even if living there might force them to drive an additional 45 minutes to work. It turns out, however, that traffic is torture, and the big house isn’t worth it. According to the calculations of Fey and Stutzer, a person with a one-hour commute has to earn 40 percent more money to be as satisfied with life as someone who walks to the office.

While the concept of critical density has been repeatedly demonstrated using computer simulations—drivers are surprisingly easy to model as a system of interacting particles—it wasn’t until last year that this theory of traffic was experimentally confirmed. A team of physicists at Nagoya University wanted to see how many cars could maintain a constant speed of 19 mph around a short circular track. It turned out that the critical number was 22: Once that density was reached, tiny fluctuations started to reverberate around the track, which caused the occasional spontaneous standstill. As the scientists note, this is actually a pretty familiar scenario for particle physicists, who are used to studying phase transitions, such as the transformation of liquid water into solid ice. In this case, the critical threshold is temperature, which triggers clusters of molecules to slow down and form a crystal lattice, which then spreads to nearby molecules. A traffic jam is simply a solid made up of idling cars.

Fancy Fast Food

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on July 18, 2009 at 11:47 am

This definitely made me chuckle.  This guy takes fast food and re-arranges it into a fancy presentation. Brilliant.

Fancy Fast Food


McSteak & Potatoes (Fancy Big Mac) by FancyFastFood

Ingredients:

* 1 McDonald’s Big Mac Extra Value Meal (#1) with a large fries and large Coca-Cola

Laptop Review: Dell Latitude E4300

Blog Category: Personal, Professional — Blogged by: admin on July 15, 2009 at 12:47 am

e4300
I recently sprang for a refurbished Dell Latitude E4300 laptop (2.4ghz CPU \ 4GB RAM \ 160GB 7200 RPM HD \ Webcam) from the Dell outlet store for $976 and wow — it is one fantastic machine. Easily the best laptop I’ve ever used and one which offers an insane value proposition which should suit most people. Why? A few notes:

Size & Weight: The E4300 is a 13″ widescreen. Having used both smaller (12″) and larger (14″) laptops I feel qualified to opine that 13″ is really the sweet spot on the size/usability continuum. 12″ laptops become consciously irritating when writing long documents or trying to compare things side by side. 14″ laptops are just too big/heavy to conveniently haul around. 13″ is just right. The E4300 is not particularly thin, but nor is it fat. Most importantly, with the standard 6-cell battery, it weighs a mere 3.3lbs! Impressive engineering.

Screen: The E4300 uses the newer ‘backlit LCD’ display, instead of the older cathode tube display. Backlit LCDs are lighter, brighter, and thinner. It’s a beautiful screen, easy on the eyes for long hours. Only the high end Sony Vaio’s have nicer screens, with the Latitude’s coming in a close second. Standard 1280×800 WXGA resolution.

Input Devices: Dell managed to squeeze what is basically a full size keyboard into the widescreen frame. It’s not the best laptop keyboard I’ve ever used (that honor definitely goes to Lenovo), but it’s definitely above average and completely serviceable. Surprisingly useful bonus feature: The keyboard activates a backlight in low-light conditions! There is both a trackpad and a touchstick. I don’t really use trackpads but I’m sure my wife will appreciate it and the touchstick — while not a Lenovo — gets the job done.

Performance: The E4300 has the “new” SP-series dual core intel processor designed specifically for mobile devices. This amazing processor gives you high speeds (up to 2.5ghz) while downclocking to lower speeds when not being heavily utilized. The end result is you get strong performance with a real-world 20%-30% increase in battery life. This thing zips around Windows Vista. The video controller is onboard, so graphic performance is modest, but more than sufficient for photoshop and watching DVDs (I’ve never understood playing games on laptops anyway). Mine came with a decent 7200rpm hard drive, but I plan on upgrading to an SSD when prices drop (which should offer a 10%-20% performance boost — extending the useful life of this hardware).

Battery Life: The aforementioned SP series processor works its magic here. Using the six cell battery, I routinely get 5-6 hours of typical usage. At 2.4ghz speed in a 3.3lb package — that’s really impressive.

Build Quality & Reliability: The Latitude E4300 is Dell’s laptop line targeted at business folks and professionals. Accordingly it gets a stronger chassis and less plastic than it’s consumer counter-parts (e.g. the Dell XPS M1330). Everything about the laptop seems solid. Nothing squeaks, flexes, or seems out of whack. Windows never freezes or bluescreens.

Refurbished: I’ve never purchased a refurbished computer before, but after my ideal configuration came out to almost $2k new, I became curious. I did some research both on and offline — there were a few horror stories but most (about 85%) of the Dell refurbished experiences were good! Importantly, Dell offers a 21-day return period so that took away my anxiety. I’m happy to report another satisfied customer. Aside from some tiny scratches on the outer screen cover (not noticeable unless closely inspecting) — it was truly like new. It’s impossible to determine why the previous owner returned it — everything works fine! Another benefit is refurbished laptops are shipped the next day, so you don’t have to wait for them to be “built.”

Dell: I don’t usually buy Dell (preferring IBM/Lenovo and HP) as I’ve generally associated them with cheaper/inferior products. But a number of IT folks whom I trust have recently told me that they believe Dell’s laptop line is really improving. In fact, a number of IT services companies have recently switched to Dell laptops for their field techs. I decided to take a chance and the experience was flawless. I haven’t had to call support yet, but I’m told that its serviceable.

Warranty: I thought it was worth pointing out that when buying refurbished, $99’s gets you three years of next business day onsite repair. That’s quite a deal and a nice offer to stand behind. I definitely took the plunge on that one for peace of mind.

Value & The Competition: If you want the same combination of flashy performance in a tiny (sub 3.5lb) package there are really only three options: Lenovo, Sony, and Apple. Weirdly, HP has nothing in the ballpark. Sony was off the table for me because — while they make some beautiful VAIOs — they just aren’t hardy. Someone should track down all the VAIO owners with cracked or separated frames or screens and put together some sort of lawsuit. That left Lenovo and Apple. I have too many useful PC programs for an Apple and they’re too expensive anyway. The comparable Lenovo options are ridiculously expensive as well, and usually lack DVD drives. I briefly considered the Dell XPS m1330, until realizing its power hungry processor gives it a mere 2-3hrs on a 6-cell. After much research the choice was clear!

Conclusion: Overall — this is a great laptop suitable for a wide audience. It does everything well and has none of those bonehead annoyances that can ruin an otherwise good experience. At under $1k (refurbished) its really a steal. Highly recommended.

A Great Story

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on July 11, 2009 at 12:51 am

Editor’s Query: Tell us about a time when the lights went out and something unexpected happened

Editor’s Query
Tell us about a time when the lights went out and something unexpected happened

Sunday, June 14, 2009

In my family, there are a few stories that get told over and over.

One of them was a mystery. About 40 years ago, my parents took my very proper grandmother to dinner at Hausner’s, then a downtown Baltimore icon. They enjoyed a fancy meal and had dessert, something they did only on very special occasions. My father ordered strawberry shortcake, and the confection arrived adorned with a single, enormous, red strawberry. But before Dad got to take a bite, the lights went out in the restaurant. When the lights came back on, the strawberry was gone.

Over the years, when one of us encountered a large, luscious strawberry, the incident was recounted, and my father, with a glint in his eye, accused my mother of stealing it. My mother retorted that my father had sneaked it in the dark, and we kids opined that our grandmother wasn’t as proper as we thought. Even the anonymous waiter was implicated. No matter how often the story was told, no one admitted guilt.

Last summer, my father suffered complications from surgery and lay in his hospital bed unconscious and dying. We gathered around him while making the decision to disconnect life support. When we decided it was time to let our father go, my mother leaned into her husband of 56 years, kissed him and whispered: “I know you can hear me, honey, and before you go, I need to confess that I ate the strawberry.”

We laughed at this bittersweet resolution and steeled ourselves for what came next.

Kathy Goodin, Fairfax

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One Fascinating Insect

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on July 11, 2009 at 12:46 am

See Them While You Can: Endangered Butterfly Gallery | Wired Science | Wired.com

One of six members of the Maculinea family, [the Large Blue butterfly] was once found throughout England but had vanished by the early 1970s. That’s when University of Oxford ecologist Jeremy Thomas went to study the island’s last remaining population.

Before Thomas’ work, scientists knew the outlines of Maculinea arion’s fascinating life cycle. After hatching from eggs laid on thyme flowers, the tiny caterpillars fall to the ground and secrete chemicals that make them smell like ants, who promptly mistake them for ant larvae and bring them back to the colony. Under the ants’ protection, the caterpillars spend the next 10 months feasting on real ant larvae, then build cocoons near colony entrances. Two weeks later the butterflies wriggle free, walk out and make a winged getaway.

Thomas found that this chemical trickery worked on only a single species of ant, Myrmica sabuleti, and M. sabuleti was also in trouble. Because well-meaning farmers had stopped grazing their livestock in the butterflies’ habitat and a virus had depleted wild rabbit populations, hillside grasses grew so long that soil temperatures dropped by several degrees, or just enough to become inhospitable to M. sabuleti.

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28 Things I Wish I Knew Before Traveling

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on July 6, 2009 at 11:56 pm

Chris Guillebeau has a great new list of seasoned travel tips — everything from how to handle a taxi fare to changing “unchangeable” airline tickets.

I’ll add two to his list: 1) You can sleep *ANYWHERE* with a good set of earplugs and an eye mask. 2) You can secure your stuff in very creative ways with pac-safe.

Favorite new site: almostfearless.com

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on July 6, 2009 at 11:27 pm

Favorite new site: almostfearless.com

The author–Christine Gilbert–quit her day job as a software manager at a Fortune 500 company to chase her dream of traveling the world. She became a freelance writer, traveling and working from anywhere. Her site is a mix of advice, inspiration, and travelogue. Christine is like a whack to the side of the head reminding you to stop doing what you loathe and start doing what you like. She systematically attacks all the excuses you have for why that isn’t possible. She also writes really clearly. I appreciate that. Some of my favorite posts:

8 Things I Wish I Knew When I Was 22

Escapism: the Dirty Word that Keeps Us Doing What We Loathe

The 10 Unexpected Costs of Owning Things

Making Money While Traveling: The Quick Guide

Make You Smile

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on June 18, 2009 at 11:25 pm

Sometimes it’s hard to be a leader, but when people “buy-in,” it can make you smile. A great video:

Simple, Delicious Homemade Pizza

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on June 12, 2009 at 12:13 am

I always thought that making pizza was a huge, three hour ordeal because of the dough. Turns out I was completely wrong. I’ve been going crazy with this insanely simple pizza recipe which involves beer (really!) and has step-by-step pictures. Great stuff.

pizza

If historical figures used twitter…

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on June 11, 2009 at 10:29 am

You don’t have to use Twitter to appreciate the genius of historicaltweets.com:

martinlkjr: Bought a sleep journal. I keep having dreams but forget to write them down.

or…

JOHNHANCOCK: Why did everyone write so small? Now I look like a jerk.

or…

jamesjoyce: 140 characters? A sentence of such fractured length would have barely begun to scratch the thin surface of man’s vain, insignificant pligh-
jamesjoyce: Damn.

I love it! Also see this outrageously funny article on slate about people who tweet once, and never return.

A Great Instrumental Riff

Blog Category: Personal — Blogged by: admin on June 7, 2009 at 11:41 pm

I was watching the NBA finals the other night and caught a new Canon EOS commercial featuring an original composition by instrumentalist Michael Montes. Instantly hooked. A little digging around on YouTube and some genius managed to reverse engineer the entire song and recreate it just by listening to it. Amazing stuff:

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