A simple numerical demonstration of the importance of execution.
Tags: execution, ideas, numbers
A simple numerical demonstration of the importance of execution.
Tags: execution, ideas, numbers
It’s not just enough to have a good idea. It’s the execution and final polishing that counts. Explained with a nice metaphor.
Tags: apple, stevejobs, design, ideas, execution
Finally. Find it under My channel>Playlists. As for adding videos to the playlist, you just need to click the plus sign in the youtube videos.
This is what makes it difficult to call Economics a true science – experiment results are rarely replicable given the number of variabilities.
Tags: nytimes, economics, policy, finance
Substitute US for India, and it will read pretty similar. That’s progress since independence for you.
Tags: patriotism, nation, loyalty
All very valid arguments, but who will bell the cat?
Tags: nytimes, banking, economics, risk
Another interesting bit of technology to look forward to. Reminiscent of the object copier by Professor Calculus from Tintin and the Lake of Sharks.
Tags: printing, copyright, 3d, technology, design
Remember the argument of iPad vs the rest in the tablets wars? Guess who’s the content distribution king on the web. Now, once the device market saturates, and the focus shifts entirely to content a la TV, who do you think will be reaping the rewards – Apple or Amazon?
Tags: interview, amazon, strategy, cloudcomputing, technology
In case you wondered what the real world application the optics chapters of Physics were during your classes.
“Radiosity is a global illumination algorithm used in 3D computer graphics rendering. Radiosity is an application of the finite element method to solving the rendering equation for scenes with purely diffuse surfaces.”
Filed under: computer, graphics, wikipedia, lighting, physics
Blame the Equipment – Thom Hogan
Pretty much like Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, but for photography
Very comprehensive for sure, though I doubt the average user will be able to perform most of them.
The Online Photographer: The Case Against Zooms
A well elucidated case against relying entirely on zoom lenses. Touches upon the importance of learning to visualize.
An interesting site containing information on Indian politicians. Includes quite a lot of details like assets, status etc. Should be pretty useful come election time.
It’s an initiative by a bunch of IITB students.
Apple’s App Store shame | ZDNet
I don’t suppose Steve Jobs envisioned that Apple would be making money (the 30% App store cut) through sales of Smurfberries & barrels of cash & the likes…
A Brief Rant on the Future of Interaction Design
A very detailed argument that the current touch interfaces are just an intermediate phase before we move on to more tactile systems that make better use of our capabilities:
“With an entire body at your command, do you seriously think the Future Of Interaction should be a single finger?”
Steve Jobs « The New Adventures of Stephen Fry
A nice piece on Steve Jobs, and the anecdote on how close he was to meeting Tim Berners-Lee and his demo of what became the www (it was apparently written on a NeXt machine) makes you wonder “what if” that meeting had happened…
Apple’s Supply-Chain Secret? Hoard Lasers – Businessweek
Supply chain is an area where Apple & Amazon have really capitalized & seem to share similarities.
File:Boulevard du Temple by Daguerre.jpg – Wikipedia
“The first picture of a person. The image shows a busy street, but because exposure time was over ten minutes, the traffic was moving too much to appear. The exception is the man at the bottom left, who stood still getting his boots polished long enough to show. Note that the image is a mirror image.”
The Social Graph is Neither (Pinboard Blog)
The “social” bit of the argument is particularly interesting:
“You might almost think that the whole scheme had been cooked up by a bunch of hyperintelligent but hopelessly socially naive people, and you would not be wrong. Asking computer nerds to design social software is a little bit like hiring a Mormon bartender. Our industry abounds in people for whom social interaction has always been more of a puzzle to be reverse-engineered than a good time to be had, and the result is these vaguely Martian protocols.”
Uncanny valley – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The uncanny valley is a hypothesis in the field of robotics and 3D computer animation, which holds that when human replicas look and act almost, but not perfectly, like actual human beings, it causes a response of revulsion among human observers. The “valley” in question is a dip in a proposed graph of the positivity of human reaction as a function of a robot’s human likeness.
Steven Poole: Whatever made you think it was your data anyway?
Two simple laws to remember:
“If you’re not paying for something, you have no reason to expect it to be there tomorrow.”
“If you’re not paying for something, you’re not a customer; you’re the product being sold”
And, as Apple showed with its MobileMe to iCloud transition, your data may not be safe even if you pay for the service. So, keep your expectations in check – “The “cloud” is not your friend; it’s where your data goes when it ceases to be yours.”
I wish I had never heard of Google+’s brand pages — Scobleizer
It’s really ironic that Google opted to launch one of their mass products minus the “beta” tag when it was clearly incomplete and evolving, and draw so much of criticism.
On the other hand, Apple launched a mass beta (Siri) that everyone’s excited about. How times change…
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The One Chart You Need To See To Understand Mobile
All very good, but it is a very narrow view based solely on the US. The real so called Blue Ocean is actually in the developing markets where the number of mobile phone users makes the US market pale in comparison. That would be the actual chart that you need to understand.
the understatement: Android Orphans: Visualizing a Sad History of Support
Makes for pretty sad reading, and the situation with Android updates outside of the US is even worse. I share the exact sentiments with my Galaxy S i9003 that’s still stuck on Froyo 2.2
Virtual Router – Wifi Hot Spot for Windows 7 / 2008 R2
“Virtual Router turns any Windows 7 or Windows 2008 R2 Computer into a Wifi Hot Spot using Windows 7’s Wireless Hosted Network (Virtual Wifi) technology.”
Steve Jobs’s Real Genius : The New Yorker
Malcolm Gladwell on Steve Jobs, based in particular on Walter Isaacson’s biography. Offers a very different view of Jobs – was he a visionary or a tweaker?