The week's twitterings – 2010-05-23

  • At the plenary at TM Forum #mworld2010 in Nice. We're invited to Tweet about it, but conference wifi doesn't cover the auditorium! #FAIL #
  • NYTimes on Goldman Sachs http://nyti.ms/bOgsMk < institutionalized conflict-of-interest stinks; break 'em up #
  • #mw2010 day 2: Profitable Cloud Services summit. Everybody declares "vendor agnosticism" but without effective standards how can this be? #
  • Now we're discussing the Enterprise Cloud Leadership Council – a forum for customer driven standards, not vendor-driven. About time. #mw2010 #
  • TM Forum's ECLC is defining a customer-driven de facto standards IaaS private cloud reference model. The consequences could be huge. #mw2010 #
  • Why would you design an Amazon-like IaaS service, and make the self-service response time 3 days rather than a couple of minutes? #mw2010 #
  • Tired of vendor presos that imply the audience is dumb, the topic is complicated, and the best strategy is "trust us". Guess who. #mw2010 #
  • Fun with #hp in Monaco during #mw2010 http://twitpic.com/1p7ph8 #
  • More fun at the casino on Monaco with #oracle during #mw2010 http://twitpic.com/1p7rj4 #
  • Fun with #oracle at The Casino in Monaco http://twitpic.com/1p7ry9 #
  • Fed up of completing 90% of the web checkin process and being told "Sorry, you have to checkin with an agent". @unitedairlines, DL,… WTF? #
  • Went to the Chagall Museum in Nice yesterday. Extraordinary, magical, luminous, spiritual, sensual. I'll upload pix when I get home tomorrow #
  • RT @jamesurquhart RT @bernardgolden: Good "cloud manifesto" by @staten7. http://ow.ly/1ObP5 #cloudcomputing<This shouldn't be controversial #
  • RT @UnitedAirlines Happy bday Tware! Retweet this for chance to win 2 RT tickets to Hawaii! http://tinyurl.com/26ka7rw #twarebday5 #
  • Last day of a long trip: 10 days in Shenzhen and a week in Nice. It'll be good to get home tonight. NCE-JFK-SFO will make it a long day, tho #
  • TMF #mworld2010 was really valuable. The ECLC ref impl for IaaS could be very significant: #cloud standards driven by real customers! #
  • No ash cloud issues, and NCE-JFK gets in 40 minutes early. Am I ungrateful if I think this just makes my layover longer? #
  • Why I try to avoid JFK: DL had 8 long-hauls arriving at the same time. Immigration overwhelmed: hundreds of people waiting for over an hour #
  • Home sweet home….. #

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The week's twitterings – 2010-05-16

  • Back on Twitter, finally, after a week! Curse you, Great Firewall of China! Thank you, @publicvpn #
  • Finally got around to configuring VPN on my iPad. Nice to rejoin the real web. It feels like the Great Firewall is more active than before #
  • Sipping a pint of Boddington's at the "Yorkshire Pudding" on Shelley St. in Hong Kong. Free wifi! Tonight I fly HKG-LHR-NCE, ash permitting! #
  • The fog has burned off: I must buy a hat before exploring Hong Kong this afternoon. I can see why people drift in and wind up staying here #
  • Arrived in Nice from HKG via LHR, checked in, turned on TV, and the pre-show for the Monaco GP is on. Shower, rehydrate, and soak it up!! #
  • There seem to be more commercials during the Grand Prix on TF1 than there are on SpeedTV. Didn't think that was possible…. #
  • However the ads on TF1 are significantly more cool than most of those on US tv. Love the Nespresso "falling piano" ad with George Clooney. #

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Iain M. Banks: Transition

Here’s my review at Amazon.com of the new novel by Iain M. Banks, Transition:

Insidiously exquisite, ultimately essential (5 stars)
I’ve always loved Iain M. Banks’ science fiction novels, especially his “Culture” books with their huge sentient spaceships and breathtaking worlds. The Player of Games is a particular favourite. And Ive also enjoyed what I think of as his various experiments: The Algebraist, and Matter.
This isn’t a “Culture” book. There are worlds – or at least a multiverse – but no spaceships. Bits of it are about the present. The characters are all recognizably human (there are no aliens or sentient machines), which doesn’t say as much as you might think. But it’s unmistakably by Iain M. Banks.
I’ve never been able to get into Iain Banks stark and gritty fiction, like The Wasp Factory or Whit. “Dark“, “twisted” novels are just fine, up to a point, but I’ve always found that Banks goes just past that point. Friends tell me I ought to try The Crow Road, which is supposedly dark, twisted, and funny. Maybe.
This isn’t dark. It’s twisted, in many ways. The characters are all recognizable to the modern eye, which doesn’t say as much as you might think. But it’s unmistakably by Iain Banks.
At least one reviewer said that he(?) couldn’t be bothered with this, and gave up after about 100 pages. In my case, I started it on a plane, got distracted, and tentatively decided that I would wait until I got home from my present business trip to finish it. But after a couple of days I found that I couldn’t stay away. It was as though the skein of this odd book had got snagged on a hangnail, and I couldn’t shake it off. (Ugh. Try another mixed metaphor.) I found myself reading it (on my iPad, using the Kindle reader) at every opportunity I got. Over breakfast. In between meetings. In my favourite cocktail bar here in Shenzhen.
Part of me wants to proclaim that it’s the best thing I’ve read in years. Other bits of me are still confused. I think that this is a very commendable thing. More books should have these effects.
I think that will suffice. I recommend it to the curious and the flexible among you.

Earwig: "Speedway at Nazareth" by Mark Knopfler

Ever since we went to see Mark Knopfler in Oakland last month, I’ve had this track “Speedway at Nazareth” playing in my head. I listen to it at least once a day, and I usually tweak the equalizer to pump up the bass in that wonderful last line. It’s a clever composition: an account of the 2001 NASCAR season told in the style of a Civil War campaign song. It came out on the 2000 album “Sailing to Philadelphia”, and the studio recording does a decent job of capturing the intensity of the instrumental jam at the end of the song.
And now if you’ll excuse me I’ve got to put on the headphones again…

The week's twitterings – 2010-05-09

  • Why is commentary on today's science tv so awful? Watching "Kilauea" on PBS; lousy mysticism, awful metaphors, and near-illiterate language #
  • On the day I head back to Shenzhen, the NYTimes takes on the mangled English of Chinglish http://nyti.ms/ciaty7 #
  • Hmmph!! @CathayPacific just cancelled my window seat and gave me an aisle instead. I argued, and got another window, but w-a-a-y back 🙁 #

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Unintended consequences with my iPad

Here’s a weird unintended effect. Yesterday morning I was working on my iPad using the BlueTooth keyboard. When I was done, I chatted to a colleague while I turned off the iPad and put both iPad and keyboard in my shoulder bag. Suddenly music started playing from my bag! Then stopped. Then started again!
Eventually we realized that the media buttons on the keyboard were active, and were starting and stopping the iTunes app as the keyboard bumped around in my bag! The only way to fix this was to turn off BT on the iPad….

File under "Bugs to be fixed before we ship…."

My ex-colleague* from Amazon.com, Jeff Barr, has a new book coming out soon on AWS and EC2 practices. Oddly enough, the “I’d like to read this book on Kindle” link is prominently displayed next to it. C’mon, Jeff: do you really need to be asked?


* Hmm. Perhaps that should be “colleague and former co-worker”. “Colleague” shouldn’t imply the same employer, should it? But “former co-worker” is clumsy. Neologism needed!

Technology trickle-down

Here’s my latest review from Amazon.com. While the review addresses a particular product, there’s a more general question – how quickly does technology “trickle down” – that I’d like to dig into sometime. I would be curious to track various consumer electronics features to see how long it takes for an innovation to make the transition from “expensive differentiator” to “Wal-mart standard”. Anyway, here’s my take on the “Fujifilm FinePix S1800 12.2 MP Digital Camera with 18x Wide Angle Optical Dual Image Stabilized Zoom”:

Technology trickle-down needs to be given a bit longer… [Two stars]
We take the “trickle-down” of technology for granted, and nowhere more so than in digital photography. A couple of years ago, most cameras had sensors that could register 3-4 megapixels and “optical zoom” of 3x. Indeed zoom was so pitiful that camera incorporated the widely ridiculed “digital zoom” which traded image quality for zoom. Things like 10MP sensors and zooms of greater than 12x were the province of the semi-pro and DSLR crowd, and commanded commensurate prices. Today, every camera can handle more pixels than we know what to do with, and even shirt-pocket sub-compacts can do impressive optical zooms using bizarre optical plumbing.
I used to have a rule: buy the best digital camera I could get for $250. Every 18 months I would get a new device which absolutely knocked the socks off its predecessor. Technology trickle down.
But how fast does stuff trickle down? And what happens if a manufacturer gets it wrong?
Coincidentally, I got hold of the subject of this review, the Fujifilm S1800, just a few days after I’d bought myself a Nikon Coolpix P90. On paper, they look fairly comparable. The S1800 is 12MP, with 18x zoom; the P90 is 12.1MP with 24x zoom. (But how often will I care about the difference between 18x and 24x?) Both have image stabilization (essential at high zoom, unless you carry around a tripod), and loads of fancy features which take forever to learn. The biggest difference is the price: the P90 cost me just under $400, while the S1800 is $204 – almost half the price. Clearly the S1800 is a great demonstration of technology trickle-down: features which used to be expensive are now available at a more modest price.
Well, maybe not. My partner and I tried the S1800 in various settings – portraits, landscapes, action shots, bird-watching, macro – and neither of us was impressed. The autofocus light is extraordinarily bright: portrait subjects were literally dazzled by it. Action shots and birdwatching were frustrating, because the shutter lag is so bad. Landscapes? Every shot required color rebalancing. And the slow, noisy zoom discourages the use of the available 18x magnification.
You can see a couple of comparative shots at my MobileMe gallery – go to gallery.me.com/geoffarnold#100132

The S1800 certainly includes a number of interesting features, and I’d encourage you to see if any of them address your personal photography needs. It offers HD video, but frankly if I want video recording I’m going to use a dedicated camcorder like my trusty JVC Everio GZ-HM200. But at the end of the day, I felt that the FinePix S1800 wasn’t ready for prime time – that the relevant technologies had not yet “trickled down” to the point where they were really usable. The worst offender is the shutter lag, which is probably symptomatic of a range of small design choices and technology selections.
I’m sticking with my P90.

The Joseph D. Grant Park

I’m going to be travelling for the next three weeks, and so yesterday was filled with packing, shopping, and taking care of a bunch of stuff. With that completed, today was declared a field trip. Usually that involves heading to the ocean, but for a change we drove inland, to the Joseph D. Grant Park in the mountains behind San Jose. Our optimistic objective was to get all the way to the Lick Observatory on Mount Hamilton, but we were flexible.
Google Maps suggested that the best way to get to the park was to go down 101 to Tully Road, and then go east on Quimby Road. Quimby is an amazing drive. I had to concentrate on my driving, but as we climbed out of San Jose I could hear Kate saying “Wow!” as the panorama of Silicon Valley unfolded. (Later exclamations were mostly in reference to the width of the road and the tightness of the hairpin bends.)
View from the Rose GardenWe set off on a trail that looped down the valley and back, about two miles. Almost immediately, we saw some kind of creature on the meadows above us. The unaided eye couldn’t identify it, but maximum zoom on my Nikon P90 pulled it in: a wild turkey:
Wild turkey about a quarter of a mile away.
More pictures from the trail:
Meadow scene Meadow scene By the stream Did woodpeckers really do all that?! What are those darker clumps? Epiphytic? Parasitic? Red-tailed Hawk Looking back across the valley Owl's Clover California Poppies California Poppy
After completing the trail, we decided to follow CA-130 towards the Lick Observatory. I was under the illusion that because it was a numbered state highway, it was going to be wider and faster than Quimby Road, but after a few miles I realized my mistake. There was another complication: traffic. There were very few cars, but many cyclists and motor-cyclists. Going downhill was no problem – in fact the cyclists went faster than I did – but uphill was a different story. Eventually we turned a corner and got our first sight of the observatory, several thousand feet above us. There was a trail-head car park on the left, and we decided to stop and have lunch.
Here are the photos that I took of the Lick Observatory, at 1x and 24x zoom:
Mount Hamilton with the Lick Observatory (no zoom) Mount Hamilton with the Lick Observatory - 24x zoom.
After lunch, we decided to abandon the Lick and head home. The Prius likes this kind of downhill run: I don’t think the main engine came on the whole way down….