Thursday, December 25, 2008

Happy Newton's Day



December 25th is a day everyone should rejoice, regardless of silly superstitious religious beliefs, simply because Sir Isaac Newton's birthday. Newton was one of the greatest thinker of all time. His work in mathematics and optics alone helped change the world. His book "Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy" is possibly the greatest or most influential book of all time. This is where he lays out the foundation of classical mechanics and formulates the laws of universal gravitation. Without Newton's work much of our modern world would not exist. So on this December 25th I am grateful for Sir Isaac Newton and not some fantasy nonsense about a virgin birth and a manger. Happy Newton's Day!

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

How to read a flowchart....

Some people have trouble reading flowcharts as they can be complicated and confusing. Below is a tutorial:



Enjoy!

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Random

Was playing poker online and very randomly this song popped up in my head:

I don't think I know any other Finley Quaye songs and I am sure I haven't heard that song in years, but on a cold and dreary day it is a nice song.

I also heard "Perfect Day" by Lou Reed earlier and even though the song is about getting high on heroin it brings a smile to my face because I discovered it one random summer day a couple of years ago while I was in Central Park on Sheep Meadow and I still associate it with that day.

Enjoy!

Friday, December 19, 2008

Real Change

Here is a great presentation by Lawrence Lessig talking about his new focus for political activity. I absolutely agree with his thesis, which is if you remove the money out of our election process only then can we impact real change to the government.


Spread the word!!!!

Radiohead

Radiohead is doing something interesting, AGAIN. During their recent show in Japan they recorded the show with 12 cameras. The interesting part is that you can create your own video cutting between different camera angels for the song "15 Step". You can post your video and see how others have cut their videos. They show how the other videos' camera selection via fantastically nerdy data visualisation charts. See my mix visualized below:



So let's recap so far Radiohead has put out their whole album out for free (or pay what you want), allowed fans to create and distribute remixes (amplive is my favorite), broadcast a full concert live online, and now this 12 camera video. Why aren't more bands doing stuff like this and by "this" I mean trying to figure out different and interesting ways to engage their fans. 

Feed

Feed: The Razorfish Consumer Experience Report is a report put out by the interactive agency Razorfish. Avenue A umm no Avenue A-Razorfish umm no Razorfish has been putting out these reports for several years. They have been great for getting a view of the state of the industry, consumer insight, and media trends. I always enjoyed getting my copy while I was a client and my friend Julie got my printed copy earlier today. There are lots of interesting and smart topics discussed ranging from "Life After the iPhone" to "Twitterific: How Micro-Interactions Are Changing the Way We Communicate Online" to "What's in a Game?: A Look at Games As Tools, Not Toys" and much more.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Evolution of the Cell Phone

This is a personal point of view...From 1999 (when I got my first cell phone) until June 29 2007 cell phones were basic communication tools. The launch of the iPhone really changed the game in the mobile phone industry (I know I am a broken record). Now my iPhone has nearly replaced my computer and has given me the ability to be always connected. But beyond that I am able to play some pretty awesome games:


Rolando launched today and so far it lives up to the hype it is a pretty fun game with great game play with the iPhone.

And in the very near future I will be able to augment my view of reality with applications like wikitude:


This looks awesome and the implications could be huge. Imagine traveling and having an encyclopedia in your hand to tell you everything about what you are seeing. In late 2001 I was traveling around Spain and then went to Rome and this type of application would have added so much more context to my sightseeing. And to think this is only a year and a half after the iPhone launch imagine what the possibilities are when battery life, storage space, and processor power are not barriers for developers and manufacturers. Now back to the wonderful world of Rolando.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

random but cool

Watching the process is pretty cool.

Facebook Connect


Several months ago Facebook announced Facebook Connect as part of the Facebook Platform. FC is an interesting addition to the Facebook Platform because it allows other content producers to use the Facebook as a means of additional distribution. FC allows you to see how your friends have interacted with the site where FC is activated. It also allows for easy distribution and social sharing of the content. 
There are a lot of sites starting to use FC (Joost, Hulu, Digg, etc.) as a means of content distribution and sharing but I am interested to see how an advertiser will use it. Most marketers are having trouble trying to figure out what is the best way to engage with social networks; actually this is what most marketers should be doing when in fact most marketers are just want a specific segment or target to be aware of their message. I think FC allows some advertisers who are doing the old "share your moments with us" campaign to help with social networking and specifically engaging the Facebook user. If you see a campaign currently running that is doing this post it in the comments.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Copy/Paste for the iPhone

The biggest missing functionality of the iPhone is the ability to copy and paste. From day one this was a glaring omission. The video below was created as a proof of concept of how copy and paste could work but unfortunately Apple has not responded:

Pastebud has been trying to create copy/paste in a unique way using a javascript via a web app. They have finally been able to get cross application copy and paste for Safari and Mail. See demo below:

This seems like a great work around but still a bit funky and it sucks that it only works for Safari and Mail. I am not sure if this works if you need to copy from e-mail to paste to another e-mail.

I hope now that the blackberry storm is out with copy/paste Apple will add this functionality in the next firmware update. This missing function will get the iPhone closer to perfection.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

50th Post


Just got back home from Atlantic City playing mostly poker and didn't get anything good going this trip. Oh well that is how tournament poker goes. I think I played good for the most part and can analyze and learn from my mistakes. I was able to make a little money playing craps when a girl was rolling and hit a hard 4 for me which I had $5 and I parlayed the $50 and later in the roll she hit the hard 4 again which paid me $500. Weeeee, I love craps it is a fun game when someone is rolling hot.

I love the feeling of coming home from a trip mostly because I love this city so much. The t-shirt above is a limited edition shirt that was designed for the new Standard Hotel above the High Line that will be opening soon. It was designed by Eric Haze, a legendary NYC graffiti artist (you can see some of his work here). I want one of those t-shirts.

I have a ton of stuff to read as I didn't do much google reader checking the past week and so I am sure I will have a lot to post/comment on. 

In the mean time I am off to wholefoods to get some cookies and eat some dinner and you can listen to some of these random songs below:


and

and

and

and

and

and

and

and

OK I'll stop now cuz I can go on and on.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Randomness...

I haven't been able to get much going playing poker. The two tournaments I have played so far have been kind of frustrating watching people play really bad and get rewarded. Oh well, tomorrow is another tourney hopefully I can make a run and go deep.

I saw this via curbed, A Self-Guided Brooklyn Graffiti Tour this focuses on Williamsburg.

and this is brilliant...



African-American Boycott of L.L. Bean Enters 80th Year

Monday, December 8, 2008

This week..

...I will be at Harrahs in Atlantic City for a WSOP Circuit Event so I will not have very many opportunities to post. This will force me to try posting more via my iPhone. There are a couple of things that are happening this week in NYC that I am disappointed to miss:
  1. The Thrilla in Manila @ the Jen Bekman Gallery - although the drawing is done the exhibition event is tonight.
  2. How Do You Like the Bowery - Short film about the art made on the Bowery on Thursday the 11th @ The New Museum
  3. Art Deco Design - Free lecture @ the NY Public Library - Art Deco in NY
  4. What is Real: Documentary Photography and the Politics of Truth @ the International Center of Photography.
Enjoy NYC.

Update at 2:40 - Just got an e-mail about a comedy show at the Knitting Factory benefiting NY Cares featuring David Cross and Eugene Mirman and a bunch of other NYC comedians. 

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Happy Birthday Noam Chomsky

I first came across Noam Chomsky's political writing when I was in college. This was in 1996 at my University's first computer lab with an internet connection. I was reading the famous article in the San Jose Mercury News about how the C.I.A was facilitating the drug trade. From there I found a link to Z-Mag and a bunch of Chomsky's articles on political dissent. I found it absolutely fascinating that he was not a full time political writer even though his political writing is prolific and he is just as prolific a linguist and that he revolutionized the field. I have yet to read his most famous Manufacturing Consent. Today is his 80th birthday hopefully he will have many more.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

iPhone as a Game Controller


iPhone as a gaming device is pretty cool here is a proof of concept purely as a controller. Makes perfect sense since these types of games are played with the accelerometer and I guess they just use the video out to play on the big screen. Pretty cool, I wonder what else they will be able to do with this. 
(found via advertising lab)

Friday, December 5, 2008

Netflix on Xbox


Yesterday I activated my Netflix account on Xbox and I am really impressed with how good the experience was. The movie started streamed right way and played nearly flawlessly, considering it was streaming the one hick up was totally excusable. Although, the whole Netflix library is not online there is a healthy selection and about half of my queue was available for instant view. This will definitely get me to use my Netflix account more often.

Netflix has a much better strategy than their main competitor Blockbuster as they are trying to go with flawed model of providing a set top box for movie downloads. Many have tried this model and none have been successful mainly because no one wants another box with just one purpose sitting next to their TV.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

iPhone instrument

OK this is really really really dorky but still pretty cool when you think about the implications. Ocarina is an iPhone app that is a music instrument that uses the microphone, multi-touch screen, and the gyroscope to create a flute like sound. 


This is just another example of how the iPhone is truly a revolutionary product. We have Steve Jobs' high standards to thank. Hopefully the rest of the handset manufacturers can catch up (although right now they are just trying to copy what apple has done). I think they will need a significant change in the way they think about hardware and software in order simply catch up. Google's Android mobile OS definitely helps but Apple, with the iPhone, has such a head start that it will be difficult for the Nokias and Motos and HTCs of the world to come out with a device that will leap frog the iPhone

Look, up in the cloud...

...it is not a bird or a plane it is gOS. gOS is a cloud computing operating system that is really light weight and beautifully developed. But first lets talk a little about cloud computing, it is a pretty simple concept that people have been talking about for years, the basic premise is all you need in a computer is basic hardware, an internet connection, and  a browser. All your applications live in the cloud and you can have access anytime on any machine. Google currently provides most of these service as does Microsoft with live. For example with Google I can have my e-mail via gamil, my documents on (excel, word, powerpoint) via google docs, my calendar via google calendar, my rss reader via google reader, well you get the picture. There is very little that I do on the actual hard drive. The biggest thing for me on my HD is my music and I am sure it is just a matter of time when Apple or Google will allow me to upload all my music to their servers and I can update my iPhone from any computer.

Now back to the gOS Cloud, which they will be launching at CES. This is the first cloud operating system that is launching and it seems that the developers have put a lot of effort into design and usability so that it doesn't look like a first version of the OS. As you can see below the browser is the hub of all activity with an application "dock" at the bottom for easy access to all the essentials (mail, calendar, docs, etc.).

(You can see more screenshots here)

The gOS Cloud had fully integrated most of Googles applications in a really simple way that is modeled after the Apples OS. Below is a quick video via engadget.



I really think in the next 2-3 years as the netbook (really small striped down computers more here and here) market gets bigger and the gOS Cloud develops and devices like the iPhone get better at word processing functions (like formatting and cut & paste) cloud computing will become more main stream. Hopefully, this will push public wifi into the spot light as well, because I don't think this will happen until there is a huge public need/outcry. Lots of chicken and eggs happening here or maybe it is something about carts and horses.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

livestation

wow livestation looks like a really cool product and they are developing an iPhone app. Livesatation brings live TV (right now focused on news content from BBC, Bloomberg, C-Span, Al Jezeera English, etc) as well as streaming content into one site/application. Since this is live streaming the ads stay in tact so the original network gets the benefit of expanding reach. The iPhone demo looks pretty impressive and it seems that livestation also has an opportunity to monetize with ads of their own that don't seem too intrusive. All in all if livestream can get more content partners (especially beyond news) this would be the perfect application. The only other comment I have for livestation is clean up your website, it just seems very cluttered. This looks like an example of design by committee as everything is jammed on the front page.

Astroturf


Astroturf is the crappy fake grass we use to see in so many sports stadiums in the 80s but in this post it is something slightly different. In the online/marketing world astroturf is when a company or marketer tries to generate hype for one of its products by posting fake positive messages on blogs or in other social media. 

This usually ends up generating negative feedback to the company mainly because it is pretty obvious that the positive comments are fake. The most recent example was with Motorola, when they posted comments to gadget blogs like CrunchGear (first comment) or Gizmodo. It was discovered pretty easily because the same comment by the same person was left on several high profile blogs. Once discovered the negative publicity was pretty rampant; if you google "Motorola Astroturf" you will see hundreds of other posts also social sharing sites like twitter, fiendfeed, etc spreading the story like wildfire. 

The funny thing is, all the people seeing the negative feeback are the people (gadget influencers) Moto is trying to get on their side meanwhile they have also generated horrible reviews about the product that was mentioned. The obvious lesson here is when dealing with social media be authentic and don't try to pull a fast one. This should be true of all media all the time but in the online social media world it is so much easier to get caught doing stupid things like this than in the offline world.

Monday, December 1, 2008

The Great Cookie Debate


Hello my name is Sahu and I am an addict. My addiction is chocolate chip cookies. I probably eaten more chocolate chip cookies in a week than most people have in a lifetime. It kind of freaks me out if I think about it for too long, then I usually shove a cookie in my face and all the bad thoughts go away.

Most people know this about me and consequently recommend that I try different cookies because they think that was the best cookie they ever had. I am not saying I am the arbiter of all chocolate chip cookie taste but people always insist I try their recommendations and are generally disappointed when I give them my review because I usually don't pull any punches.

Below is a run down of the places and brands I have tried and my thoughts (in no particular order):
  • Wholefoods Market chocolate chip cookies - Right now these are my gold standard. They are baked fresh everyday and the freshest will have a sell by date 4 days out. I don't even remember how I came across them but it was about 3-4 years ago and I haven't gone a week without at least one tub (usually 3 or 4)
  • City Bakery - These cookies were recommended my poker playing friend Carl (who you can find here and here and here). He has recommended several places and these are the best of his recommendation. Overall the cookies was OK they are pretty big and baked fresh everyday. Unfortunately, it seems like they are baked at the same time or in the same oven with a bunch of other types of cookies and so the chocolate chip cookies end up tasting like some of the other cookies.
  • Levine Bakery - This was another recommendation from Carl. It is a tiny place on the upper west side and their cookies are over the top huge. I feel like it is a cookie I would get if I were in Minnesota. Also they don't have a pure chocolate chip cookies their have a chocolate chip cookie with walnuts and a double chocolate chip cookie.
  • Insomnia Cookies - This is another small place located on 8th street between 5th and 6th ave. The cookies here were not very memorable. I only remember when I was eating them how bland they were. I am not sure if it was because of the chocolate chip or the cookie.
  • The Grand Lux Cafe @ The Venetian casino in Las Vegas - These cookies were discovered and sufficiently hyped up by Jeff and Jenny while they were on their wedding/WSOP trip. These cookies very nearly lived up to their hype. They were freshly baked and you had to order them when you first sit as they take 30 min to bake. Generally, I hate any type of nuts in my cookies and these cookies had pecans but they were not overbearing and for the most part not even noticeable.
Desperate times call for desperate measures:
  • Entenmann's Cookies - These are an old stand by when I don't have wholefoods accessible to me and I am in desperate need for a cookie these are perfectly serviceable. 
  • Pepperidge Farms - They have several chocolate chip cookies and the best ones are the soft baked dark chocolate chip. But I generally stick to the double chocolate milano where pepperidge farms is concerned.
  • Chips Ahoy! - When I was young and ignorant I crushed these cookies like there was nothing better in the world and now these are barely serviceable only if there is absolutely no way of getting any other cookie and you are starting to get the shakes.
I will update this post as I try different cookies and as I get other recommendations but if you ever tell me to try this I will have to give you a stern back handed bitch slap.

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