Archive for June, 2007

Notice that not much is said about the price?

The iPhone is coming out on the 29th.

4GB model = $499
8GB model = $599

Oh, and by the way, that is with a two year contract.

Hmmmm.

Yep, not worth it. Its pretty, its functional, but sadly, its crippled, and its tied to a contract.

At the WWDC, Jobs announced a shitware alternative to a SDK, ie solely Java development for the Safari browser. The development community is not too happy. You can wrap shit up in a box, make it pretty, but in the end, it is still shit.

Unless something changes, I don’t think this is going to be a big winner with the bleeding edge geek crowd.

Why can’t this happen on US TV?

Don’t Ask

Abso-fuckin-lutely

From here:

In a global survey released last week, most countries polled believed that China would act more responsibly in the world than the United States. How does a Leninist dictatorship come across more sympathetically than the oldest constitutional democracy in the world? Some of this is, of course, the burden of being the biggest. But the United States has been the richest and most powerful nation in the world for almost a century, and for much of this period it was respected, admired and occasionally even loved. The problem today is not that America is too strong but that it is seen as too arrogant, uncaring and insensitive. Countries around the world believe that the United States, obsessed with its own notions of terrorism, has stopped listening to the rest of the world.

I could rant for a day and a week about the things brought up in this article, but I just don’t have the time right now.

This will go in the “later-gator” category.

At the end of the day, openness is America’s greatest strength. Many people on both sides of the political aisle have ideas that they believe will keep America strong in this new world—fences, tariffs, subsidies, investments. But America has succeeded not because of the ingenuity of its government programs. It has thrived because it has kept itself open to the world—to goods and services, ideas and inventions, people and cultures. This openness has allowed us to respond fast and flexibly in new economic times, to manage change and diversity with remarkable ease, and to push forward the boundaries of freedom and autonomy.

It is easy to look at America’s place in the world right now and believe that we are in a downward spiral of decline. But this is a snapshot of a tough moment. If the country can keep its cool, admit to its mistakes, cherish and strengthen its successes, it will not only recover but return with renewed strength. There could not have been a worse time for America than the end of the Vietnam War, with helicopters lifting people off the roof of the Saigon embassy, the fallout of Watergate and, in the Soviet Union, a global adversary that took advantage of its weakness. And yet, just 15 years later, the United States was resurgent, the U.S.S.R. was in its death throes and the world was moving in a direction that was distinctly American in flavor. The United States has new challenges, new adversaries and new problems. But unlike so much of the world, it also has solutions—if only it has the courage and wisdom to implement them.

But for the record: Any politician that advocates fear and tyranny is not a politician that belongs in an elected seat. Strength is completely different than fear.

V for Vendetta will not get out of my head as I read and view and observe the presidential races. It is like viewing the world through a lens of dystopian hatred and dark unspoken fear.

Ahhhh… oldie but goodie Vader mash

Clip takes for bloody ever – but great physics example

Thought of the day

Your first child is the catalyst by which you realize that your existence is solely owed to your own parents.

Your parents, already knowing this, giggle behind their hands at your sleep deprivation, bodily fluid covered clothes, and ragged hateful stares at the people better rested than you.

The cycle of baby, parents, grandparents if a process wrought with irony.