MG Siegler posted over at parislemon about what Hollywood needs to do to fix itself. Minus the language, I agree with everything he said.
Put this way, it sounds so simple. And actually, it should be this simple.
Agreed.
MG Siegler posted over at parislemon about what Hollywood needs to do to fix itself. Minus the language, I agree with everything he said.
Put this way, it sounds so simple. And actually, it should be this simple.
Agreed.
I’ve had the pleasure of using a 27″ iMac at work since about mid-December, but that time has come to an end. As such, I’m moving back to one main development computer both at work and at home (my trusty 13″ MacBook Pro … I really think Apple is going to kill off this model this year).
Here are some thoughts on using the two computers:
Overall, the 27″ iMac is one of the best machines I’ve ever used. Can I really go back to having a desktop-only Mac? Probably not. The closest I will possibly get would be a Mac mini … but even that is different than a 27″ behemoth taking up most of your desk.
I finally took stock of the old computer parts I had sitting in my basement office this past week and decided that maybe I should just throw together a box and see if FreeNAS 8 would work for my needs.
So this is the box I have running FreeNAS at the moment:
So far, it works really well. I’m having some issues with the machine not booting properly every time, but I think that it might be a bad stick of RAM or some other issues. I have a single ZFS volume setup on the 250 GB drive with a single ZFS dataset being used for Time Machine backups from my wife’s MacBook.
I’m going to run with this for a little while and see if it fits my needs. Next thing is to find another drive to use for just generic storage and see if that will work well. I also need to transfer it over to my gigabit switch so that I’m not being limited by the 10/100 switch I have on my workbench.
This is nothing more than my strong opinion.
Please stop posting articles on Google+.
I’m not saying don’t use Google+, don’t share links on Google+, or shun Google+ completely … that would be a different article. What I’m saying is don’t post your longer-form articles strictly on Google+ for a simple reason:
If you post it there and I find it on Twitter, have the link sent to me via email, or see it anywhere else and click to read it … I’m taken to the Google+ website. That website is terrible of reading longer-form articles, and it is absolute TRASH on anything but a desktop browser. No, I’m not going to open up a mobile app to read your article.
You are, first, giving Google control over your longer-form writing and, second, making the whole experience worse for your readers. Please stop doing it.
Brian Ford posted The death of the serious reader today in response to Jonathan Franzen’s comments in the the Guardian.
The money quote from Brian Ford is this paragraph:
One wonders if Franzen isn’t lamenting so much the loss of the “serious reader” as the loss of the status quo: Readers who don’t actually do much reading, but who save their money for those bestsellers (cough, Freedom, cough) which pique their interest two or three times a year, because a massive marketing campaign tells them it’s time to open up their wallet and splurge on the next big thing.
You’re finding this sentiment not just with books vs. ebooks, but in every other media industry as the internet flattens the distribution channel and because of that kills scarcity as devices are able to view and create more and more media.
The idea that these media companies are then using their money to try and have their current business models propped up indefinitely is terribly sad and frightening.