It’s January 2nd, the last day of vacation before myself and my family plunge into our regular schedule of school, work and a list of activities that would make an unattached bachelor cower, rocking and shivering in a corner. And so, having some “free” time, and knowing that the tires on our family van are so tread worn that a stray tic tac on the road could result in a blow out (On a side note, I agree with my wife that a tire sale should not be advertised as a blowout special), I journeyed out first thing this morning to a local tire dealer. Unfortunately, my perception that I am the only person on the planet in need of tires who happens to have a day off for such activity met the brick wall of reality. This is a wall I continually stumble into and each time I am surprised, not having any recollection that this just happened last week. I believe my children’s hamsters learn faster from experience.
With my tires ordered and two hours on my hands with no where to go, it occurred to me that I could check into Foursquare! I’m at a totally new place, so that will gain me bonus points, not to mention the chance at some mystery badge to add to my collection! But, having plenty of time to think about it, it occurred to me that I have no worthwhile reason whatsoever to “check in.”
Social media is all about sharing, but as social networks have matured, we have realized that sharing every minute detail of our daily lives is boring, and quite simply, no one cares. The most used and simple example is food posts. Nobody cares if I had bacon and eggs for breakfast. I don’t even care. It’s not as if I want to make the commitment to post each and every meal and then after years of collecting data, pull all of this information out so that I can discover my proclivity towards English muffins and my avoidance of French toast.
Foursquare is the ultimate in breakfast posts. Except for a handful of people who spend every waking moment traveling to interesting and amazing places, most of us regular folk do horrendously boring tasks and when we aren’t doing those, we’re at home or work. For example, buying tires. Or grocery shopping. Or picking up the kids from school. You could post on Twitter every time to go to sleep. “Well, it’s off to bed again for the 13,505th time. Gonna be a wild ride!” Or when you go the the bathroom on Facebook, “I just shat the most enormous poop log in my life!”. Or when you’re buying tires “Tires sure are bald. Gonna get those totally rad Michelins!”.
No one cares that I’m at the tire store, or that my tires are bald, or that I’m being a responsible adult by replacing them. I don’t even care. Once I have the new tires, I’ll move on to my next unexciting task. I will forget about tires. I will forget the two hours spent sitting around the tire store, drinking bad coffee. I will never, ever think to myself, “I wish I could tabulate all of the times in my life I replaced my tires and at which locations.” And none of my friends, followers, subscribers, pluskateers or electron buddies will enjoy or benefit from knowing my current location. In the end, while its so easy to share our lives at the speed of light, it turns out that little we do is actually worth sharing. Perhaps in the long run, this will make us better, motivating us toward a more meaningful life. For now, I’m off to get a sandwich.
BlackBerry Messenger is Having a Stroke. Recovery Time Unknown
After having initially said the issues were resolved following one day of service interruptions, millions of BlackBerry users across Europe, the Middle East, Africa and even some areas in South America still find themselves without access to the Wen or messaging services for the third consecutive day.
I guess it could be worse. It could be worldwide. Not the sort of publicity RIM wants for the one thing they have going for them.
Update:It looks like the problem is spreading and may indeed be worldwide. RIM appears to be confused as to what is causing the outage. It’s been a brutal year.
Ultraviolet: It Burns
As a first-time user, you’ll need to create a Flixster account, open an UltraViolet account and link it to Flixster, and enter a 12-digit redemption code from the Blu-ray disc to gain digital access. It’s a five-step process, but the good news is that once those accounts are set up, you won’t have to enter that information again.
Finally, there’s the physical media aspect of the launch. Today, the only way to score an UltraViolet-enabled digital copy of a movie like Horrible Bosses is to buy a physical DVD or Blu-ray disc. That’s because currently, there aren’t any digital-only storefronts available. Again, Vudu and digital stores like Best Buy’s CinemaNow are soon expected to offer their own UltraViolet-enabled products, but in the meantime requiring a DVD or Blu-ray purchase to gain digital access seems a bit counterintuitive.
Most people couldn’t program their VCRs back in the day. A five step process, and you need to buy a blu-ray disc? I’m not sure why Hollywood expects consumers to work that hard to view their movies. Have you seen Horrible Bosses?
No More Freebies
Previously, Genius Bar staff had some flexibility in waiving the $199 out-of-warranty replacement fee as a “one-time exception”, giving customers a free replacement for a damaged phone. With the shift to AppleCare+, Genius Bar staff will no longer have the option of offering free replacements, so customers who have been aware of Apple’s informal replacement policy should be mindful of the change.
I had a feeling this would be the case. It doesn’t make sense for Apple to have an inconsistent customer service message that depends on how good your story is when you walk up to the genius bar.
Qwikster is Nixster
It is clear that for many of our members two websites would make things more difficult, so we are going to keep Netflix as one place to go for streaming and DVDs.
This means no change: one website, one account, one password… in other words, no Qwikster.
While the July price change was necessary, we are now done with price changes.
Well this sure instills confidence in the leadership over at Netflixster. I can’t wait for the next big announcement.
Who Would Want an iPhone 4S?
Want a new iPhone 4S in your hands at the earliest possible date? You’ve missed it. Take a look at the U.S. Apple Online Store and you’ll see that shipping estimates are now listed as “1 to 2 weeks.” Before the pre-order stock for launch day delivery was sold out, the site stated that iPhones would be delivered on launch day, Friday, October 14.
So, Apple has sold out all its available preorder stock for October 14th delivery. Now, I don’t know how many units that was, but I think a more than reasonable guess would be as many as Apple could make and have ready.
“Apple no longer has a leading edge, its cloud service is even behind Android; it can only sell on brand loyalty now,” Gartner analyst C.K. Lu told Reuters on Wednesday. “Users may wait to buy the next iPhone; if they can’t wait, they may shift to brands with more advanced specs.”
I guess the iPhone 4S doesn’t suck after all.
It Took Less Than 48 Hours
I’ve read a couple of very negative commentaries about Steve Jobs, published in light of his recent death. I’m not going to quote them. I’m not going to link to them. The websites in question don’t deserve the traffic, and their blog posts are a waste of bandwidth. But I do have a couple of comments.
This is a free country and Steve Jobs was a very public and yet ironically private figure. At the current speed of information, it was almost respectful to wait two days before publishing articles bashing the man. Trash talk sells, generates clicks, and traffic. There is no moral compass that governs the modern journalist in the blogosphere.
Was Steve Jobs a jerk? Sometimes. Perhaps a lot of the time. Does it make any difference? Not really. He was who he was. He’s not celebrated for his altruism or his philanthropy. He was a brilliant businessman, inventor, designer, and innovator. That is his most important legacy.
Did he build his company on the backs of the poor in countries like China? Not exactly. Apple doesn’t own a factory in China. They contract work out to the same manufacturers that are used by Microsoft, Dell, Nintendo, Intel, and many others. Are there crappy working conditions and child labor at these 3rd party manufacturers. Yes. But in reality, corporations are amoral entities whose main obligation is to provide value to shareholders. Consumers bring morals to the transaction and frankly, they’ve voted for cheaper products and rose colored glasses. And ultimately, it’s up to the Chinese government and Chinese people to affect change in their labor market. Remember that it wasn’t that long ago that Henry Ford was ordering his thugs to break employee kneecaps. You can’t force societal and cultural change on another country easily. Just look at Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, etc. If Jobs is an evil man for abusing poor foreign workers, we’re all accomplices.
Was Steve Jobs a control freak? Hell yes. About everything and especially when it came to apps in the app store. Certain types of apps will likely never be allowed in the app store. Apple isn’t a democracy. Each app approved is about creating a carefully curated space that adds value and appeals to as wide an audience as possible without insulting them. I know you’ll counter that the app store approved multiple fart apps and the like. The thing is, kids love that crap, and their parents are pretty much okay with it. Pornography on the other hand? Why waste time whining about what Apple won’t let you do? Buy another product. This one isn’t for you.
On Jobs and philanthropy, it’s not clear where he stood. If he did make contributions, they weren’t publicized. But it doesn’t really matter. There’s no requirement that the value of a man’s life should be measured by his charitable giving. You don’t see articles suggesting that the latest Medal of Honor winner would have been a great guy, but he never donated to the local food pantry so he must be a douche. Sure, Warren Buffett and Bill Gates are in the giving game, but they’re playing it the way they did in enterprise, building charitable empires. There’s nothing wrong with that. But there’s not necessarily anything right about it either.
History has been kind to its great figures, because their flaws have been forgotten in a time when they weren’t recorded in minute detail. I can acknowledge that Steve Jobs was a flawed mortal, who did amazing things.
An Excellent Review of the Recent Apple Event
I always enjoy reading John Gruber’s thoughts over at Daring Fireball. I don’t think I could have summed it up better, and I don’t have the time in any case. I highly recommend his summary of the iPhone event from October 4th, 2011.
Overshadowed
Color us a disappointed shade of blue, but it appears that Samsung and Google have decided not to launch the Galaxy Nexus (or Nexus Prime, or whatever it’s called) and Ice Cream Sandwich at their October 11th Unpacked event. The two companies sent out a joint announcement reading:
Samsung and Google decide to postpone the new product announcement at CTIA Fall. We agree that it is just not the right time to announce a new product. New date and venue will be shortly announced.
Good publicity for non-Apple products will be hard to come by for the next few weeks.
The Problem with Streaming Music Services
Rdio is offering a free service without commercials as competition for listeners intensifies with Spotify, Pandora and Mog Inc. Pandora and Spotify offer advertising-supported free music services. Rdio aims to convert free users into subscribers to its unlimited desktop and mobile-music plans that cost $5 to $10 a month.
Three consumer problems yet to be solved by streaming music services:
1) Why spend 12 or more albums worth of music a year to rent music?
2) With this many competitors, someone will fail. What will happen to all my hard work making playlists, etc. if I bet on the wrong horse?
3) Major music is missing in a patchwork fashion across services.
Until these problems are solved, consumers won’t join in numbers that will make music streaming a profitable venture. As far as Rdio, yes some people will convert to the paid subscription once the free stuff is gone, but for the most part, people are happy to take advantage of free as long as it’s free. But they won’t want to pay later for something they get for free today.
