book – John Hodgman

Rockin’ tipped me off to the hilarious John Hodgman book, The Areas of My Expertise.

An Almanac of Complete World Knowledge Compiled with Instructive Annotation and Arranged in Useful Order by Me, John Hodgman, a Professional Writer, in the Areas of My Expertise, which Include: Matters Historical; Matters Literary; Matters Cryptozoological; Hobo Matters; Food, Drink, & Cheese (a Kind of Food); Squirrels & Lobsters & Eels; Haircuts; Utopia; What Will Happen in the Future; and Most Other Subjects; Illustrated with a Reasonable Number of Tables and Figures, and Featuring the Best of “Were You Aware of It?”, John Hodgman’s Long-Running Newspaper Novelty Column of Strange Facts and Oddities of the Bizarre.

The Areas of My Expertise – Wikipedia

Very original.

Actually, I downloaded it for free (email address required) from iTunes as an audio book with accompaniment by frequent collaborator Jonathan Coulton.

The Areas of My Expertise

finally bought an iPod nano

In an unbelievable coincidence my beloved Rio Cali MP3 player popped out of it’s arm band holster and fell into a crack at the very summit of Tasmania. (I was scrambling the final rocky spire of Mt. Ossa, the highest peak.)

But as I am addicted to podcasts these days, I needed a replacement ASAP. An MP3 player is essential for travel.

I shopped the top Apple nano competitor, the Sansa. No likey.

While not perfect, the nano is pretty bloody brilliant. I love the size and tactile interface.

And it seems I solved the (AIDS) crisis in Africa by (buying( the 4Gb (red).

Wear your music (and heart) on your sleeve

When you choose the iPod nano (PRODUCT) RED Special Edition, you get an iPod nano in a bright red aluminum enclosure that tells the world you’ve chosen to join (PRODUCT) RED. And Apple contributes $10 of your purchase to the Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS in Africa. It’s that simple.

The Apple Store (U.S.) – iPod nano

Nano.jpg

wireless remote control for laptop display

After researching the options for my MacBook laptop, I ended up simply going with the Apple remote which came free with my laptop.

Then I added Mira software which added 55 more applications including PowerPoint. Actually, you can control almost any software on a Mac with Mira.

Worked great for me in Australia. I recommend Mira.

video – Apple Steve Jobs Keynote – Greenpeace

To coincide with the 2007 Macworld Expo keynote by Steve Jobs, Greenpeace has created this fake presentation in which Apple premieres a “green” iPod with new recycling and take back policies.

Video: Fake Apple Steve Jobs Keynote by Greenpeace (TreeHugger)

Click PLAY or watch the spoof video on YouTube.

recycling Apple products – works !

UPDATE:

Further to my hassles getting Apple to recycle their products as promised …

Once I got the attention of Big Apple and their recycling partner Metech with a critical blog post on Dec. 15th, 2006 — I have been treated very well by both. Personal attention.

Environmentalists have been critical of Apple. I’m not at all sure those complaints are valid.

Is Apple worse than Dell? Than Nokia?

I do not trust any of them. My assumption is that all the “green initiatives” are for PR. Perhaps even meaningless public relations theatre. I hope I’m wrong.

I finally shipped 60lbs of old Apple product (free rather than the standard US$30, courtesy of Apple) to Metech in Massachusetts. (By UPS at a cost in carbon emissions, I know.) Metech promises to properly recycle the precious metals and other toxins. I assume they will — otherwise some other blogger with time on his hands will be posting it.

I had far more than 60lbs. The rest I dropped off at my local computer store. They threw them in a recycling dumpster out back, part of the local electronics recycling program that is far more convenient for me, free, but probably not as thorough.

It took time and perhaps 20 emails to organize the “official” recycling, but Apple and Metech did come through. Thanks to both!

Fact is I have always got excellent service from Apple in the dozen or so times I have needed it.

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Apple – iPhone

iPhone it is.

iPhone combines three products — a revolutionary mobile phone, a widescreen iPod with touch controls, and a breakthrough Internet communications device with desktop-class email, web browsing, maps, and searching — into one small and lightweight handheld device.

iPhone also introduces an entirely new user interface based on a large multi-touch display and pioneering new software, letting you control everything with just your fingers. So it ushers in an era of software power and sophistication never before seen in a mobile device, completely redefining what you can do on a mobile phone.

Apple – iPhone

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best interview of 2006 – Eric Schmidt

(If this post looks too long, boring and geeky, instead listen to the 10min audiocast.) If it won’t play on your computer, you can hear the superb interview by clicking a link at it at the bottom of this page.

Not everyone agrees, but for me Eric Schmidt is the person best placed to predict the future of the internet.

He’s the CEO of Google. On the Apple Board of Directors. And capable of almost anything.

From his article in Economist:

Eric.jpgThe internet is much more than a technology—it’s a completely different way of organising our lives. But its success is built on technological superiority: protocols and open standards that are ingenious in their simplicity. Time after time they have trounced rival telecommunications standards that made perfect commercial sense to companies but no practical sense to consumers. …

But what’s surprising is that so many companies are still betting against the net, trying to solve today’s problems with yesterday’s solutions. The past few years have taught us that business models based on controlling consumers or content don’t work. Betting against the net is foolish because you’re betting against human ingenuity and creativity.

Of course this new technology raises profound challenges for many established companies. Skype, an internet telephony business (voice over IP), is as disruptive to the economics of the telecommunications industry as China has been to the global manufacturing sector. But that disruption is only going to intensify.

In 2007 we’ll witness the increasing dominance of open internet standards. As web access via mobile phones grows, these standards will sweep aside the proprietary protocols promoted by individual companies striving for technical monopoly. Today’s desktop software will be overtaken by internet-based services that enable users to choose the document formats, search tools and editing capability that best suit their needs.

The fastest-growing parts of the internet all involve direct human interaction. Think about the blogging phenomenon and social networking sites like MySpace in America, Bebo in Britain, Orkut in Brazil, CyWorld in Korea and Mixi in Japan. In 2007 the virtual communities so prevalent in Asia and among students will become mainstream. Political pundits may claim that society is becoming atomised, but online communities are thriving and growing. The internet is helping to satisfy our most fundamental human needs—our desire for knowledge, communication and a sense of belonging.

Trend is not destiny, of course. But as a no-nonsense sports writer once wrote during the depth of America’s Depression, “The race is not always to the swift nor the battle to the strong—but that’s the way to bet.” We’re betting on the internet because we believe that there’s a bull market in imagination online.

The World In 2007 | Dont bet against the internet

wireless remote control for laptop display

I am looking for a way to display photos, videos, Powerpoint, etc. from my old Apple PowerBook on a TV. (My new Apple MacBook comes with a remote that seems to work well.)

UPDATE: Rockin’ tells me this device works with Powerpoint.

Remote Control for ItunesRemote Control for Itunes

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Keith is happy with the SmartDisk product which works plug-and-play with his PowerBook.

SmartDisk PowerPlay Pro Wireless Remote for Microsoft PowerPoint with 32 MB Flash Drive
SmartDisk PowerPlay Pro Wireless Remote for Microsoft PowerPoint with 32 MB Flash Drive

A competitor product is sold by Logitech:

Logitech 2.4 GHz Cordless Presenter

Logitech 2.4 GHz Cordless Presenter

review #1 – MacBook

Still using my old Powerbook as the work horse.

But slowly I’m shifting my iLife to the new MacBook laptop. (iLife is music, audiocasts, photos and video.)

Worst thing about the MacBook?

Some of my old software does not work with the MacBook Intel chip.

Best feature?

The Magsafe power connector.

magsafesmall.jpg

David Pogue, tech columnist at the New York Times, has listed his favorite product features of 2006. This list is all about the small touches on products that really make you think that someone thought about these items before they tried selling them.

One Apple feature made it on the list, and I must agree with the good Mr. Pogue on this one. The Magsafe connector is a marvel of technology. As David points out there is no ‘right side’ on the plug, and it pops out if the cord is jerked instead of dashing your MacBook, or MacBook Pro, on the floor.

Pogue’s Top Ten new product features of 2006 – The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)

Internet 2007 – predictions

This is by far the best I have seen.

(Amazing that such far-sighted visionaries make so many typos.)

Highlights include:

# Apple keeps its iPod monopoly and increases its OS 5% market share to 5.1%
# Google scores against Microsoft and Yahoo due to its massive marketing data advantage
# Blogs bloom, and prepare for the 2008 election
# Social networks become a place where members make money
# Newspapers open up
# Big ad investments start streaming in
# New Internet focused ad agencies open up
# Viruses and spam become an even bigger hassle
# Yet Digital ID initiates a major change that makes the web more reliable, user and investor friendly

Information Architects Japan » iA Notebook » Internet 2007 Predictions: Digital ID, Google vs Microsoft, growing Web Ad Budgets, Infolution in 2008

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