Categories
Technology

It’s A Tractor

We hear a lot about how computing is changing and Steve Jobs himself used the car vs. truck analogy when speaking about the new mobile-centric devices vs. general-purpose computing devices at the D8 conference in 2010. John Paczkowski has a follow-up, now three years later, to that statement by Jobs.

I think that analogy is a little weak, however. Too many people drive trucks even when they don’t need to.

Being a farm kid, I’ve come to think of the differences more in-line with car vs. tractor. You will not find many people driving or even owning tractors unless they have an explicit purpose for them. Here is how it works in my mind:

  • You CAN do everything you can with a car with a tractor. You can drive places. Haul things. Move from place to place … but you are handicapping yourself in some way and adding a lot of complexity to get things done. This is the weakest part of my change in analogy.
  • There are things you CANNOT do with a car that you need to be able to accomplish with a tractor. I would love to see someone pull Ā ripper through a freshly harvested field with their car (any car). A tractor is set up to be able to do this thing explicitly.
  • Different types of tractors are purpose-built for certain jobs. The largest of the articulated four-wheel-drive tractors is meant almost exclusively for tillage. I’d think those are more in-line with the Mac Pro of today. The more general-purpose tractors are along the lines of the iMac or MacBooks available now (using Apple-centric ideas).

The thought is that the line is being ever-more-thickly drawn between what we thought of computers even two or three years ago and the newer, mobile-centric devices we are seeing permeate the populace. This was brought into focus into my mind when reading the AnandTech review of the 2013 Mac Pro. Here is the closing line to the review (and you should read the whole thing):

If you have a workload that justifies it and prefer OS X, the Mac Pro is thankfully no longer just your only solution, it’s a great solution.

Woven throughout the entire piece is the idea that the Mac Pro has been created and tuned for very specific needs, a very specific purpose, and with very specific workloads in mind (highly parallel, makes use of GPU acceleration, etc.). I have the feeling we are going to be seeing more and more “compromises” made to target specific types of workloads because that is the way to get big gains in some areas.

The general purpose computer will continue to move to iPad-like devices where what we used to consider general purpose computers move into more specialized roles. Because of this, I’m not going to hold my breath on an iPad version of Xcode.

In this new world, developers, editors, etc. are farmers … so they need a tractor to get their work done. Apple is planning on providing tractors to those who need them and cars and trucks to everyone else as well.

Both are important, but you need to keep the distinction in mind.

Categories
Business Technology

Bringing the Change

First of all, congrats to Novell on winning the award. From the looks of it, iPrint is getting some well-needed accolades for the work they have been putting in. I’m looking forward to playing with it soon myself.

When I retweeted that link today the back of my head was screaming PRINTING IS DEAD as loud as it could. I had to ignore it and retweet it anyway because if there is one thing I have learned over the past few years it is that printing might be dying, but it is not dead and printing will still be a vital part of any organization for a while to come.

As people steeped in technology, we might see the end coming and might even be able to get there ahead of others. However, if we want to bring everyone else along for the ride we need to do a few things:

  1. Stop yelling that it is going to happen.
  2. Figure out what problems your current solution is not solving for them.
  3. Solve those problems BETTER than their current solution.

You need to respect the people you are working with first because you’re not going to find out why they are doing what they are doing until they are willing to sit down and open up with you. Then work to solve those problems in a manner better than they are already doing. People aren’t going to give up their solution until it is worse in some way that affects them directly and painfully.

Then everyone is happy!

Categories
Business Life Technology

Eggs and Baskets

My family’s farm has a handful of egg-laying hens so I like the phrase “don’t put all of your eggs in one basket”. I tend to think it is a pretty good mantra to live by in many facets of life (not all, mind you).

In technology it gets to be interesting because many times we are encouraged to toss in as many “eggs” as possible into a single vendor’s “basket”.

That tweet made me just a little sad because the same sort of tweet could have been tossed around about Microsoft, or IBM before them. The “nobody ever was fired for using [insert platform here]” meme rings almost too true when it comes to technology decisions for many.

Now, I’m just as terrible since I try to stick as close to the Cupertino mothership as I can, but when making IT decisions IĀ spread the wealth around when appropriate. It is a “right tool of the right job” sort of approach which has served me well.

When leveraging a single platform you have so little control over to do so much, you put yourself at extreme risk if that platform owner would decide that they are going to amend the deal you’ve been working on. Think of it like poor Lando when Vader comes to Bespin. You better hope that Leia is there to save your skin in the end.

I know monolithic platforms can provide some benefits, but they also are filled with extreme risk. Google is no different from Apple is no different from Microsoft is no different from IBM. They’re all seeking money to stay alive (and create military robots … sorry). Relying too much on a single platform will, some point in the future, bring you pain.

The question is always: will the pain be worth it?

Categories
Life Technology

Why I Have This Site

Jonathan Poritsky wrote Medium Confusion over at The Candler Blog. It is a good read about Medium and what it might be in the future (or the present or … eh … whatever). Go ahead and read it before going on because I’m going to focus on just a small portion of the entire post because I agree with it entirely.

Here is one of the money quotes for me:

The paid writers bring their clout to Medium, the platform, in order to convince unwitting writers that they should contribute to Medium, the magazine, for free. The paid authors are thus pied pipers of a sort, luring not the readers but theĀ writersĀ out of the web and into Medium.

This has been something I have missed as the web has continued to be splintered into smaller and smaller little fiefdoms. It might be because I have the ability to stand up my own WordPress installation (which you are on) and fool around with programming enough to really hurt myself, but you see it happening more and more by people posting their thoughts to Facebook-only, or Google+-only, or Medium … it is all the same. It locks the information up behind something else. Sure, it might just be a free login, but will it always be that way?

I have this site not because I want fame, but because I want to have my own place to write and “call my own”. I dabbled with Tumblr for a little while, but the idea of being able to control my own content and not need to worry about whether it would meet the standards of someone else is refreshing.

It is also a single place where you can find out what I am doing. If you happen to read something I wrote about Novell you might also find out that I am into Nintendo, or web design, or agriculture, or … you get the idea.

It feels like we are losing that.

Categories
Technology

Misunderstood

Apple released a new ad for Christmas.

http://youtu.be/ImlmVqH_5HM

I really like it. Ben Thompson has thoughts which echo my own (for the most part).

Apple has had some hits and misses recently with their advertising, but most of their recent work has been really understated and I think of very high quality.

For advertising, that is.