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After The Original

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

So, that new iPad thing — wait! Don’t go! I promise that this will be the last iPad post I’ll write for a good long while, okay?

I have to admit, I’m a bit cool on Apple’s new wundertoy. And yet, I’m still looking forward to its launch because of the inevitable cavalcade of followers it’s bound to inspire. The serious contenders, the cheap knock-offs, the cynical attempts to cash-in – I can’t wait to see what people will come up with.

The main complaints that people seem to have about the iPad is that it might fall between two stools: It may be too big and clunky when compared to an iPhone, while also being not quite useful enough to supplant the netbook. Be that as it may, the fact that Apple is basically telling all the little consumers out there that tablets are a viable form-factor means that we’ll likely see more people embrace it. And that gets all the other hardware manufacturers dreaming of all the money they could be making selling their own tablets. (And a lot of hardware makers have such devices on the market, already.)

Which is a good thing, because the other big complaint about the iPad is the closed-off, proprietary nature of its software, which allows it to be elegant – but also makes it the best device yet for nickel and diming consumers to death, constantly dunning them for new apps, new content.

It’s a good thing that there’s going to be wave after wave of non-Apple clones of this thing, because at least a few of them will be so, so hackable. The word will get out about which ones are better than others, hobbyists will start cranking out code, prices will slowly start to fall, and then – maybe – it will happen. That dream shared by millions of geeks the world over, might actually come true.

I am referring, of course, to the mass adoption of hand-held, truly general purpose computing. In computer science, general purpose computing is strictly defined as any computer that can follow arbitrary, programmed instructions. (Technically, the iPhone is a general purpose computer, from that point of view.) However, while the chips in an iPhone might be capable of just about anything, the restrictions placed on it by its creators hamper its potential, and betray the spirit of General Purpose.

The iPad is yet another instance of Apple’s dictatorial approach to information technology. This has its advantages, and can lead to some incredibly elegant and reliable products. But, the iPad — its software will be closely monitored, and expanding its capabilities will be costly to the end-user, and ultimately, it still may not do all the things you want, the way you want. We might accept this for a mobile phone (the major carriers and phone manufacturers have trained us not to expect much), but the iPad is half computer; and maybe that’s too much like a computer for us to stand for that sort of thing.

Cheaper, more open knock-offs are bound to emerge. They may never be as popular as the iPad, nor will they ever be as cool, or as easy to use. But any company hoping to seriously compete (or siphon-off the people who can’t afford the “real deal”) will try their damnedest to build open, high-quality machines to face-off against Apple’s new marvel. True wide-spread, hand-held, general purpose computing might actually arise.

And so, the iPad really could change how we think about and use computers.

And it will be all Apple’s fault.

| January 30th, 2010 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Science & Technology | Tags: | Trackback | No Comments »



True Love Waits

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

At this fraught, precarious time for our nation, many people are waiting for their leader to deliver some words of inspiration, encouragement, and hope for the future. Let’s hope Steve Jobs really nails it.

Not to cast aspersions at what is likely to be the most important tablet since Mt. Sinai, but even if this thing completely revolutionizes computing as we know it, the odds are good that the technology won’t trickle-down to us underclasses for awhile. This is good news for anyone that can afford the new toy, because it means that you hold off on buying the new Apple thing, while still retaining an audience of people to impress with it. And you should hold off.

It’s a widely held belief that one should never buy first generation Apple hardware, and there‘s some reasons for that, not all of them technical. Remember all those early adopters who got burned by the sudden iPhone price drop that happened mere months after its release?

I say: Ignore all that. You’re going to hear a lot of people tell you to hold off for at least a couple of months – a year if you can manage it – but I’m giving you permission to go for it. Sure, if you wait they might drop the price; and, of course, there’s all those inevitable hardware and software bugfixes that will be incorporated into later manufacturing runs, and the increase in available software that also comes with the passage of time.

None of that matters. What counts is showing your friends and co-workers that you’re doing well enough to spend unwisely. “Yeah, just happened to be walking past an Apple store, and I figured what the hell, you know?” And then you watch your friends, coworkers, and family-members try their best to keep their intense feelings of jealousy from being revealed by the expressions on their faces.

As fleeting as this sort of thing is, you shouldn’t let that stop you. This is your last chance to be cool, even briefly.

I mean, look at you.

| January 27th, 2010 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Science & Technology | Tags: , | Trackback | No Comments »



Video Service: The Method

Saturday, December 19th, 2009




A lot of people don’t trust scientists. I think that’s because a lot of people just find them frustrating. It’s understandable, if you think about it: Have you ever tried to convince some skeptical friend of something that you know is true, only to have all of your intense feelings of rightness and sensibility written off as completely irrelevant?

Scientists are worse. Convincing a scientist of something is really, really hard. Especially for non-scientists, since we lack the years of training that go into teaching scientists how to sift that very special stuff called “evidence” from the piles stuff that isn’t. If you’re absolutely sure that what you believe is true, when someone else refuses to be convinced by your conviction, it’s hard to take, sometimes. “I feel very strongly about this! Isn’t that good enough to convince you?”

But, as fallible, vain, and stubborn as individual scientists can be, they work in a system that, so far, is the only system of thought that humans have developed that does a pretty good job of ameliorating those factors. It’s not perfect, of course, but the scientific method—crude as it is—has produced some pretty marvelous results. You don’t have to believe in it for it to work. Penicillin doesn’t require faith in order to be effective.

That’s not to say that what scientists choose to investigate, or the way that they frame their results isn’t influenced by cultural bias. But, when scientists get something really wrong, other scientists can prove that the other guy or gal didn’t get the facts right, even if it takes a couple of hundred years. Because, in the end, it all gets put to the test.

| December 19th, 2009 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Music, Science & Technology, Video | Tags: , | Trackback | No Comments »



A Casiotone Christmas

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

As Christmas rapidly approaches, my thoughts have mostly been on all of the work I need to get done before the holiday wipes out my company’s productivity. Emails will go unanswered for weeks, attention spans will be shortened, project starts will be resolutely postponed until after the new year, and meetings will be impossible to arrange.

But I also can’t help thinking about all those warm memories of Christmases past, and all those things that make the holidays great: You know, presents. (Yes, yes, it’s the honest emotional connections to friends and family that make life worth living, but all those stories are far too personal—and, more importantly, dull—to share. So, let’s talk about goodies.)

Though we never had a lot of money, my parents always made sure to save up enough dough to give us kids some really awesome gifts. Did this make up for the previous 11 months of neglect, guilt, and fear? Let me put it this way: for Christmas, 1989, I received a Game Boy. So, in other words, hell yeah, it did! That’s a tale for another day, though. Let’s talk, instead, about the year I received the gift of music.

The story really starts with a few days during summer vacation that my brother and I spent with our aunt and uncle. They were a fun, childless couple (at the time), who were renown for their grand adventures, and for always showing up  at least two hours late to every family event. They also tended to have some pretty sweet gear. (The first VCR I ever saw was theirs.)

This particular summer, (I can’t remember the exact year) they introduced me to two devices that I coveted very badly. (I was a selfish child.) One was an early laptop computer, and the other was a Casiotone keyboard. The computer I was definitely not allowed to touch (I must have been only seven or eight at the time, with nasty jam-covered fingers). The keyboard, however….

I recall very clearly spending what must have been hours with the damn thing. Sitting there on the floor in the spare room noodling away was some of the best fun I’d ever had, up to that point. Twiddle your fingers on the keys and sound comes out. I couldn’t get over that!

I didn’t know anything about music, I just messed around. But it was such enjoyable messing that it didn’t matter. It helped that my aunt told me to “just play the white keys”, because that meant everything I played was in key and sounded okay. (I didn’t realize you could play chords, either.)

I’m not sure if I returned home begging for a keyboard, or if my aunt or uncle  reported on my new-found fascination to my parents, but either way, that Christmas I was given a Casiotone of my very own.

It was an MT-220 (I had to look that up, just now), and it was cheesy. Casiotones were famous for their bravery: They actually insisted upon naming the bizarre sounds they made after real instruments! Talk all you want about Vowel-Consonant Synthesis, the real science behind Casio’s keyboard sounds was human suggestibility. If that sound wasn’t labeled “trumpet” you’d never guess that that’s what they were after.

Well,the Christmas I received that little keyboard of my very own was a very musical one, I can assure you. Thank god for the headphone jack.

I was obsessed with the thing; for months I toyed with it constantly, though I never actually asked for (nor was I offered) piano lessons. Who needed them? For one thing, I had been scared off music lessons by countless TV shows and cartoons that made learning how to play the piano look like some form of medieval torture, and for another, how much training did you need to get great-sounding farting bass notes from the Funky Clavi setting? Of course, over the years the interest waned. A few years later I got a guitar, and the old MT-220 was forgotten. For a while, anyway.

Did I ever tell you about the time I recorded a five song EP using only the MT-220, a CT-310, and a boombox?

Oh look, I’m out of time. Some other day, perhaps.

| December 17th, 2009 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Music, Science & Technology | Tags: , , | Trackback | No Comments »



More Video: The Nook

Sunday, December 13th, 2009



I know I’m a little late on this, but there’s a  25 minute “first look” video by a guy named Matthew Miller, on YouTube. It looks pretty cool, but that split-screen interface might take some getting used to.

Personally, I can’t imagine buying an ebook reader right now, since there are still so many unsettled issues with DRM, file-formats, and so on. But the technology is looking pretty cool.

| December 13th, 2009 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Books & Literature, Science & Technology, Video | Tags: , , | Trackback | No Comments »



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