Categories
Technology

Ubuntu Shows off Tablet OS

tablet-multi-taskingIt was going to happen at some point, but today Ubuntu, with Mark Shuttleworth at the helm, released a video and area of its website about its work on providing a tablet-optimized experience for its OS. This is on the heels of another such announcement earlier about a phone-optimized experience as well.

It seems to demo pretty well but the proof will have to be in what the OS feels like when actually using it.

The idea of a single OS, a single install, moving from phone, to tablet, to PC, to TV is an interesting one (and one that Microsoft seems to agree with in principle), and I happen to consider Linux and Ubuntu my second-choice OS after Apple’s offerings, so this is kind of exciting to me.

I’m considering getting a Nexus device to take a look at what the tablet offering might end of being like. My hope is that with the quick development that Ubuntu seems to pride itself in, there might be a third or fourth leg to this increasingly interesting mobile space.

 

Categories
Life

Your Idiotic Past Self

My close friend Phil Wels posted A Bit of an Idiot yesterday and I implore you to go ahead read it completely. It is not very long, but it is poignant.

I’m not a person who ever thinks about the past as “the best years”, and in what Phil writes it makes sense why my mind doesn’t jump to that conclusion right away. I was an idiot back then. Here’s a picture to prove it!

Idiot Bob

Five years from now I will be again.

I hope that I can always look into the past and see an Idiot Bob. I hope we can all do that. If we are not working to learn more and be better than we were even ten minutes ago, then we are going to atrophy and it is all over.

Just. Keep. Swimming.

Categories
Business Life

Service Counts

I’ve recently been working through the interview process for a customer service position with a company that I greatly respect. One of the cool benefits of going through the process is the questions I get asked during an interview and how my mind works over those questions during the next couple of weeks.

I work in the “customer service” business every day. Working IT in a higher education setting puts me in contact with staff, faculty, students, parents, and visitors from all different walks of life. While I don’t ascribe to the saying “the customer is always right”, one thing that I have learned is that service counts.

It counts a lot.

Bayshore Apple StoreI worked here for only four months, but I learned so much about customer service in those four months that it made the four-moves-in-six-months worth it.

The big takeaway for me was that excellent products can bring a person in and can even get them to buy something. Products can always be shiny enough, or “new” enough, or “fast” enough to get a person to purchase them. You can always market your way into purchases.

Loyalty, true customer loyalty and satisfaction, only happens with excellent service. Don’t underestimate what excellent, timely, and available customer service can do for your bottom line. Customers who feel like they are being taken care of are going to speak more highly of your product and your company than they would have if they don’t get that service … obviously, right?

This all seems elementary on the base level, but how many companies have outsourced or claimed to “help their bottom line” by gutting their service department? What a terrible fate for the company because that will rot the company from the inside, not just from the outside. Not taking service seriously means not taking the company as a whole seriously because you are saying that it is the sale that matters only, not the experience that someone has with whatever you are selling.

Just think about that? How terrible.

This goes to even how easy it is to GET service. Don’t bury service and support on the bottom of your pages, requiring people to set up another account just to talk with you. The Apple Stores are important for Apple not just because they sell a lot of stuff there, but because it is a place for people to gather and get their questions answered. That builds relationships and loyalty that Microsoft and Samsung are trying to replicate by having their own stores instead of relying on the Verizons, Best Buys, and independent PC resellers of the world.

Customer service is vitally important to the health of a company. That is one place where investment is necessary and will pay off in the long run.

Categories
Life

Star Trek Vanguard

vanguard

A few years back I started reading the Star Trek Vanguard series. Sadly, I did not keep up with the series and so I had three books left …

… luckily, Amazon sells used books. Amazon sells them so I feel an odd obligation to buy them.

After I have the books in my possession, then it is a race against the clock to finish them as quickly as possible. Sadly, that means some late night as I try to plow through as much of the book as I can before my eyes glaze over and I fall asleep in the chair I am sitting in.

However, after reading the entire series, I can say that this is the best original Star Trek fiction I have read … maybe ever.

Here are the books from Amazon:

I really do recommend the entire series, and do read it in order. Somehow, the authors crafted a self-contained story within the confines of The Original Series which is both grounded within TOS (by bringing in Kirk and the Enterprise at the right moments) while still giving itself enough room to create excellent characters with excellent relationships.

One of the unique things about the Vanguard series is the role civilians have in the story. They don’t seemed tacked-on and play a vital role within the story. Not just comedic relief, but actually pushing ahead the story and relationships among the characters.

Overall, it is a fantastic story based on a station and the attached ships. I can easily recommend it to anyone who enjoys Star Trek: The Original Series and would like some light reading.

Categories
Technology

The Cloud is not The End

I host this site on a VPS from DigitalOcean. Great prices, great speed, great value. I’m very happy with them.

If/when I build a Rails app or need some sort of backend for an iOS app, I’ll probably look at a Cloud platform like Heroku or maybe even another VPS just to keep things simple.

I understand that “The Cloud”, as it is most often called (and I’ll stop using the quotes), is an exciting thing but it isn’t new. It also isn’t the death of hardware. If anything, it is a change of the hardware that normal people need to keep around in order to get something done.

The Cloud is hardware, somewhere. It isn’t necessarily in your house, but there is a physical box somewhere that needs to be setup and maintained so that your information isn’t lost and so that you can get at it fast enough. Just because you don’t see it, doesn’t mean it isn’t there.

This enables devices to be smaller, do less, and have other advantages (like longer battery life) that matter to consumers more now than in the past. That is a good thing. The Cloud, however, does not replace the need for hardware.

It just changes it.