There will be silos

Silo

Silo issues – lack of seamless interoperability between computer platforms/devices/services – will undoubtedly remain in the near- (possibly medium-) future, but that’s not a good thing.

In a 2011 post, I basically broke down the issue at that time into two buckets:

  • Devices: One eReader can’t support the other’s format; and why do I have to buy a game twice for my two devices – an iPhone and Android tablet? (Just an example)
  • Data: Why so hard to move MY data around? Export from one service to another is painful to impossible?

The wildcard – The Cloud

Both these problems still exist, and I’d argue that Point 2 (data portability) is getting worse, simply because more and more people are putting everything into The Cloud: “Blog posts” and pictures at Facebook or Tumblr; pictures at Instagram or Flickr.

Remember, Google just shuttered a social network – Orkut. Who’s to say another (former) heavyweight won’t be around forever? (Orkut was huge in South America, particularly Brazil, before succumbing to Facebook.)

We first put words (blogs, emails, forums, social networks) into the cloud that we expected to always be there.

Now we’re putting pictures and videos in the cloud, and we’re getting closer to putting a lot of date- and location-based info in the cloud: Think of doing an entire wedding on the web/via an app. Invites, RSVP list, registries etc all through one site. It probably exists; if not, it will.

But what happens when that wedding site/app shuts down a few months before your wedding? Is there a standard “eEvent” export “eEvent -wedding” that you can use to move your guest/church/restaurant/band/registries from the shuttered site to a new one?

Nah.

And let’s say there was some sorta such export.

But – for directions to, say church and reception, the shuttered app only supported Google Maps. But the import tool only supports Bing or Yahoo! maps (and so on…..).

Lot of chaos going on re: silos right now.

Not getting a lot of attention, for two reasons:

  • There are – everyday – new ways to push/create new/existing data into the cloud via desktop or mobile apps. Remarkable. Let’s see even more!
  • Exporting data out of the cloud and/or re-importing it somewhere…not so sexy. (So few efforts [relatively], and little press).

This is a problem that’s going to get bigger still before it gets smaller, in my opinion.

Well, that was quite a day

AIC
The Art Institute Of Chicago

Last Thursday (7/3/2014), Romy and I took a day off of work to:

  1. Make the July 4th weekend a day longer, and
  2. Go into Chicago, where we haven’t been yet this year.

The weather prediction – up to the day before – had the weather, at best, as overcast. We ended up with a nice sunny day, light breeze, about 70°.

Yeah, we got lucky.

The plan was to hit the Art Institute to see the Magritte exhibition (and other stuff), hit my old neighborhood (Lakeview) and noodle around there, and then check out a place Romy’s been jonesing to go to, The Fish Bar.

We pretty much followed that script, and here’s how the day went….

Magritte
Magritte exhibition

Magritte was, to both of us, kind of a yawner. The show contained only a few of Magritte’s well-known paintings, and was – to me – somewhat pretentious. I keep forgetting how artists fall into their own world, to a certain degree – where the change of a yellow is, to them, a significant commentary on [whatever]. That’s how the descriptions of Magritte’s works struck me. Something beyond what it was.

NOTE: This may have been the fault of the museum’s preparator, but the text quoted a lot of Magritte’s writings.

That said, we hit the photography room where there was a great exhibit of Edward Steichen’s commercial work for Conde Nast. I’d seen some of same, but it interesting to see more of his commercial work. His non-commercial work is way better than his Conde Nast work, but it was fun to see his pictures of the famous (Gretta Garbo) and the not-so-famous (who the hell is this that they have an article about them?) who graced the pages of Vanity Fair and Vogue.

Nighthawks
Hopper – Nighthawks at the Diner

We noodled around a bit in the Art Institute, just hitting this or that (Hopper’s “Nighthawks at the Diner,” hand-held 1/3 second!) until we had our fill of art.

We went over to Millennium Park, where a band/chorus was practicing for what was obviously a homage to George M. Cohen (probably for the 4th). Fun to listen to.

We then hit my old neighborhood (Lakeview; lived there all of two years) and we just couldn’t get into just wandering around there. When I lived there, it was different: We didn’t have to worry about when the parking meters expired, when we have to get back home in the suburbs. We’re just not shoppers, so what else is there to do?

This neighborhood – to me – has changed quite a bit recently. We usually hit there at least every other year, if for no reason other than to hit The Coffee & Tea Exchange (awesome bean coffee – like bacon, the smell of roasted beans is intoxicating).

Lakeview currently has way more girls women than I remembered (yay!), fewer bookstores (boo!), and is – overall – both cleaner and more antiseptic than in the past, if you understand. Berlin is still there (is it still raunchy? I dunno), but other fringe places are gone, replaced by H&R Block or what have you. It’s a different neighborhood. More gentrified. Lots of nail spas.

Fish Bar
The Fish Bar

That said, there are still some interesting discoveries to make in the Lakeview area.

Romy stumbled across The Fish Bar some time ago, and we set our sights on having lunch there.

It wasn’t what I was expecting – I was expecting fish & chips, brass rails, kind of a dark low-ceiling bar/restaurant and all. But The Fish Bar is more open, more casual and the food more tapas-like.

For us, that’s perfect. We don’t need a 10-lbs bass with fourteen side dishes. We got food, it was good, we were full (I had blackened red fish tacos. AWE-some). Not overfilled.

As a bonus, when we got home, our sidewalk had been fixed. Long story, but let’s just say it’s been a decade of pain and crooked concrete, and it appears that our long local nightmare may well be over. Yippee.

Happy B-Day WWW

WWW 25th BdayWell, I guess the Google image captures it best – very understated.

Yes, the Web is 25 years old today – ah, it seems like it’s both been here forever and just a recent innovation.

I was actually on the internet before the WWW came along – I was using Delphi and (unknown to me) executing UNIX commands to do stuff: Veronica, Gopher, Finger and so on. UUencode/UUdecode.

But then Mosaic came along (what the hell is a winsock??), and – shortly thereafter – Netscape. Graphics. Hyperlinks. Magic.

The web has changed my life – I do web development for a living (an occupation that wasn’t one 25 years ago), and I live on the web in many ways: Write on this blog, post some of my pictures on my online gallery, by stuff via Amazon and other sites. The web has fundamentally changed so many lives; it’s hard to believe it was just begun 25 years ago.

Happy B-day WWW – and thanks, (Sir) Tim Berners-Lee!

Updates 3/13/2014:

  • Tim Bray had one of the more interesting takes on the B-day. He’s always a good read. The one sentence that resonated: “The Web’s a container; it’s what it carries that matters.” That is so true – without the content, the APIs and the mashups, the web is just a protocol, and a pretty vanilla (but brilliantly clever) one at that.
  • To be clear, 3/12 was the day Berners-Lee turned in his proposal for the web, not the day the first server (also by Berners-Lee) fired up. One could also count the release of Mosaic as the birth of the web. Whatever.

Bookcases – before and after

More detail to follow, but I replaced the RTA Sauder dark bookcases with real wood (cherry veneer) bookcases from 57th Street Bookcases (the Evanston, IL store).

Good choice.

Before:

After:

I gained about 3 feet of lineal storage, with much better looking bookcases. Very happy.

Count the shelves: Before, six. After, seven. Key to it all.

The stuff in front of the books is inconsequential; but I actually ADDED a few feet of (computer) books, and the shelves are still a little empty. Awesome!

Some random notes about this purchase:

  • While these are veneer cases, they are solid wood – veneer over plywood. No particle board.
  • Both the faceplate (the “frame” around each bookcase) and the front edge of each shelf (about 1/2-inch deep) is solid wood. So there are no veneer-to-veneer edges that can make this type of construction look less polished than solid wood.
  • Not sure what kind of wood the veneer is (ash? birch?), but it has a nice grain.
  • I opted for the cherry finish, in oil and wax (as opposed to stain and wax). Very happy with the look and especially the feel. Nice smooth – but not plasticy – look and feel.
  • Had bookcases delivered, and the delivery men – independent contractors – were very good (we have a tight staircase).
  • On the other hand, it took three tries to get confirmation of final payment (half up front, half on delivery). Kind of annoying.

Just a roundup of web news

It’s been a busy couple of weeks on the web, both in terms of news and news makers.

Here are some highlights:

  • Facebook purchases WhatsApp…for $19 billion (yep, with a “b”). Time will tell whether this is a smart move or not, but I like MG Siegler’s take on this, that it’s “the strongest signal yet that we’ve fully entered a new age in the world of computing where mobile is now the kingdom” – the web has been dethroned as the biggest deal (kingdom). And, to Siegler, that big price tag for the acquisition means that there isn’t any king in this new kingdom. Interesting take.
     
  • Tim Bray is leaving Google. Why? Because he lives in Vancouver, and Google no longer deems his telecommuting as viable. Bray is very even-handed about it, and even goes as far as to agree with Google. But he doesn’t want to move. So they part ways. It’s a loss for Google, but it’ll be interesting to see where he pops up next. He’s too smart and way too curious to just pack it all in. And he promises to keep blogging – good! He’s always a solid read.
     
  • Om Malik gives up journalism. Malik was one of the first – maybe the first – tech bloggers to go out on his own (no newspaper/print backing) and create an online information hub (GigaOm.com). Yesterday, he announced he was giving up the 24-hour news cycle and taking on other roles. While I’m sure he’ll turn in an occasional article, his voice will be missed. He often had a way of cutting through the fog/hype and seeing an acquisition/hiring for what it really was.
     
  • NBCnews.com redesigns – and I stop going there. I’ve made fun of both NBCnews.com and cnn.com in the past for having a lot of non-news on the allegedly news sites (especially cnn.com), but the NBCnews.com redesign has made it more like … People magazine? It employs the same responsive design/picture-heavy design as Yahoo’s new tech site, but it works for Yahoo Tech – but not for a breaking-news site (see pics, below). I have to go down four screens to see an update on something that blew up in some country X days/weeks ago. Can’t scan headlines. I’m pretty sure this is not me just “not liking change,” but I could be wrong. But – for now – NBCnews is rarely visited.
     

Amazon does magic

FlowAmazon came out with a new addition to its mobile app – Flow (another review) – that is just short of amazing. (NOTE: Currently only available for iOS; I’m sure the Android version is right behind…).

What is it?

It’s a visual search – select Flow in the search area of the app (instead of typing in search or scanning a barcode), and your back-facing camera turns on. Point it to what you’re interested in, and – no taking pictures, in real time – the app tries to identify the product and, if found, displays its price/availability/etc at Amazon.

The blue dots you see are dots that continually flash, attempting to identify the product outline/features and so on.

Works great with books and other flat, stock Amazon items – the CD pictured is from 1981 and it was found in seconds. I didn’t find a book or software box it couldn’t identify (Paintshop Pro 8, Windows 2000 Professional Edition, XML for Dummies… )

3D objects are a little more of a challenge (hand lotion was found; flashlight, tape measure and Chapstick not found).

Yet it just launched today – it’s only going to get better. (FYI – battery hog!!!!)

I have a grasp of how they are doing all this, and it’s mind-boggling that it does as well as it does right out of the gate.

And it’s a brilliant move by Amazon that must be terrifying brick-and-mortar vendors. I can stand in a store, just view an item with the app (no noise of picture snapping) and get what it’ll cost at Amazon. If I decide to go with Amazon, hell, toss it in cart, use one-click to buy it (I’m on Prime, no shipping cost issues) and *bam!* I’m done.

Less than a minute from checking it out to having it delivered. This has the potential to change retail in some significant ways.

Nest Protect

Nest ProtectAbout a month or so ago, our basement fire/carbon monoxide alarm began chirping, signaling low battery.

And – of course – the chirping started in the middle of the night…

Seeing as how this would be the third set of batteries in that unit in about six weeks, I figured the unit was a goner; time for a new one.

I got to thinking about Nest’s – the thermostat maker – new product: The Nest Protect: A combo fire and carbon monoxide detector/alarm.

Long story short, I bought one. It’s considerably more expensive than other detectors – the Nest Protect was $129; the one it replaced was around $40-$50.

After purchase, installation and use of the product for more than a two weeks (installed ~ two weeks ago), here are some first impressions, in no particular order:

  • It’s smaller than I expected. While pictures of it up on the ceiling/wall don’t give a real sense of scale, I pictured it larger (but am glad it’s not!). It’s about the size – WxLxH – of three regular plastic CDs cases stacked.
  • Heavier than I expected. There grill appears be be metal (or some non-plastic). Good.
  • Brilliant design from a looks point of view. It’s a sexy looking product. When have you ever thought that about a smoke alarm?
  • Software is brilliant as well. From the different colors of the collar around the Nest logo to it’s alert design – smartphone message as well as just the audio alarm. Behavior-wise, there’s a lot to like about this little unit.
  • Overall, this is the first non-Apple product that looks and acts like an Apple product – and that’s high praise. Apple sweats the little details (maybe too much, but that’s another entry), and in the case of the Nest Protect, it too reflects this holistic approach to design.
  • Nest was founded by two former Apple employees, including one largely responsible for the iPod. So the Apple-ish of the Nest Procect is no surprise.
  • The (replaceable) batteries are designed to last a “couple of years” – the documentation says they cannot yet make that claim officially, because it hasn’t been in testing that long. But if true, that’s a real selling point, as well – especially for those hard-to-reach detectors it could replace.
  • Just an FYI – have to have a smartphone (to run the free app) as well as a WiFi connection for this to really work as advertised.
  • One complaint – the notifications to the smartphone come to the Nest app – I’d prefer a text message. The Nest app might be buried down on screen four; text messages are always up front. The notification comes in, but if you don’t check right away, you might think it was something else. Nest – address this please.

Again, handful of weeks with the unit, and so far so good. The batteries could crap out tomorrow and then I might be less than thrilled, but – for now – very happy. Worth the extra cost for the extra features (especially the remote notification) at this point.

Also, the Nest Protect and the Nest thermostat are the first real “internet of things” items that are getting into average (non-geek) homes. Interesting to be seeing this from the ground floor.

* Picture from screenshot @ nest.com

The Big Chill, 2014

Wow, cold and windy outside.

What did I do this weekend?

Shoveled snow.

Snow dropping off, but cold is getting colder.

Update Monday, Jan. 6 – Chicago broke an all-time low record today @ about 8am: -16°F. At the same time, it was only -11°F at the South Pole. ‘Nuff said…

Good riddance, 2013

All things told, 2013 wasn’t a bad year for us (Romy & I), but it was certainly nothing remarkable.

One the upside, we refinanced our house, had a better-than-expected trip to South Dakota and we’re both still employed – the latter no small feat in this sluggish economy.

On the downside, we lost some friends and family this year: Doris, Mary Rose and, of course, Action Jackson.

Weather overall was just … whatever. Never too long a spell of hot or cold, but not a good year for growing a garden.

All in all, 2013 kinda sucked. Not at all sorry to see it go.

Two Christmases and a Funeral

Doris Newlin
Doris Newlin – my aunt
1918 – 2013

Actually, make that two Christmases, a wake and a funeral.

We did Romy’s parents’ Christmas on Dec. 24th and 25th down in Valparaiso, IN. These yearly sojourns are extremely secular, immediate-family affairs – more of an excuse to eat and drink than much else. Sushi, German cold cuts, herring salad, BBQ chickens, filet mignon, brats and more. And we brought home a fridgeful of leftovers.

I just got back from my Dad’s house, where we held the Geistlinger Xmas palooza. More of a traditional affair, with a tree and other decorations, lots and lots (and lots – basically, too many) gifts and good food (again, almost too much…).

For my side of the family, this holiday was a bit more somber. My 95-year-old aunt, Doris, died on Dec. 21st after a year of health difficulties. Had she hung on for another month, she would have hit 96. We had the wake for her the day after Christmas and the funeral the following day (yesterday/Friday).

While always a blow to lose a family member – especially close to an event in which the member was to participate (our Xmas) – Doris lived a long life, outliving two husbands and basically doing more in a day than I do in a week, pretty much up until the last year of her life. By all means mourn the loss, but don’t forget to celebrate the life!

She’ll be missed, as will her cookies – she was a great baker. You know how when you’re in college and you get a “care package” from home? Food, money, socks and so on? Well, my Aunt Doris would send tins and tins of awesomeness. When a package from her arrived, well, I was everybody’s best friend.

Fortunately, I still have a few days off before I go back to work, so perhaps – perhaps – I can get some (one?) of the projects I had hoped to at least make a stab at before it’s back to the regular routine.

All in all, both a very normal Xmas and not-so-normal Xmas season for me this year. And right around the corner is 2014.

What ya got in store for us 2014?