Categories
Technology

Lying

Joshua Topolsky of The Verge penned an article for The Washington Post titled Why Mike Daisey had to lie to tell the truth about Apple.

Absurd? Yes.

I would recommend reading some responses from Ben Brooks and Dave Caolo because they are far more eloquent than I am about the subject.

Needless to say, I agree with both of them. The saddest part about the entire situation with Mike Daisey is that he’s now hurt more than helped things. He’s undermined his credibility (the little he might have had) and now called into question all of the problems people bring up.

With that in mind, I can only imagine that the primary goal of Mike Daisey was to make money for Mike Daisey by exploiting the workers in China. Then you have Topolsky and The Verge (along with many other publications) using Daisey’s exploitation to push up the page views to their own sites.

And then when he is defrauded, you have some (like Topolsky) trying to justify not doing due diligence and then using the whole “ends justify the means” phrase to just hand-wave it all away.

Sadly, in this case, the ends and the means both stink. That’s great.

Categories
Technology

Apple should NOT grab Twitter

Barry Ritholtz wrote Why Apple Should Grab Twitter over at The Big Picture.

Needless to say, I think this is a terrible idea. The last thing that Twitter needs is to get swallowed up by a larger company and the last thing Apple needs is a large acquisition to possibly steal any focus away from what they do best.

Let Twitter be Twitter and Apple be Apple. The acquisitions need to stop.

Categories
Life Technology

Duncan’s Nest

As my wife can attest to, it is no secret that I am a huge fan of the Nest Learning Thermostat. Duncan Davidson has some pictures of his Nest along with his initial thoughts on the device.

I echo his hope that this is only the beginning of home automation offerings from Nest.

Categories
Technology

Reinventing Education

Please watch this video about Kahn Academy. This might not be the future of education, but it is at least someone trying to push some traditional boundaries.

For me, the most eye-opening thing was the data that was available for people to look at (at this point, teachers), and how amazing it was to see how students varied in how quickly they moved through material not just in general, but each individual student hitting some bumps but then accelerating.

It was just really impressive.

Categories
Technology

Phoneography

Harry Marks posted over at Curious Rat an article title ‘Phoneography’. In it, he takes issue with the idea that ‘phoneography’ is ruining photography.

I agree with everything he wrote.

Phone cameras are getting better and better, and have two HUGE advantages over dedicated cameras of any shape or size:

  1. your smart phone is (almost) always with you
  2. the sharing options on a smart phone are plentiful and easily accessed

I can take a picture with my iPhone almost anywhere and share it almost anywhere. By choice I usually post things to Twitter, and Apple has made that stupidly easy. No matter what, you can’t do that with my wife’s Nikon DSLR without going through multiple steps, and usually I don’t carry a DSLR along with me.

‘Phoneography’ isn’t ruining photography, that’s an absurd statement.