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Category: technology

Reading the Internet

So in the past two or three weeks I’ve had about two or three discussions with people regarding Apple’s upcoming iPad. Usually the discussions go like this: Me: I want an iPad. Them: Are you insane? Me: No, I’m serious. I keep thinking of situations in which I’d love to use something like that. Them: [...]

College Try

So John Gruber named Henry Blodget his Jackass of the Week because of a piece Blodget wrote at Silicon Alley Insider suggesting that Google will do to Apple in the ’10s what Microsoft did to Apple in the ’80s. That is, completely marginalise the company and develop and control the de facto operating system. Gruber’s [...]

I Hate You, Research in Motion!

Work recently provided me with a Blackberry Bold, and while some things about it are really cool, some things remind you how shitty phones are. People complain about the fascist-like App Store Apple runs for the iPhone but sometimes the level of frustration you experience with other phones makes you beg to be put into [...]

Is Microsoft a Software Company?

In response to the snarky line I had regarding Windows Vista in my post yesterday, Andrew made the point that Apple can afford to sell their new operating system at such a low price because they’re a hardware company and selling software cheaply encourages hardware adoption. (The implication being that Microsoft is a software company [...]

Affordable OS Updates

Apple releases their new operating system, dubbed Snow Leopard, on Friday, and the most interesting thing to me is the price. For users running the current Leopard version of OS X the price is only USD$29 (AUD$39). This is impulse purchase territory as far as I’m concerned and I’m eager to see what the uptake [...]

The Turn of the Small Fry or Thoughts on Advertising and Reading

Mandy Brown has a great post that concisely describes the dilemma of advertising and reading on the web. The disruption of the reading experience by advertising is an issue I feel incredibly strongly about and one that has prompted me to adopt a variety of strategies, from avoiding particular web sites altogether to using tools [...]

A Story About DRM

I have a (slightly pretentious1) story for why legitimate customers dislike DRM. It is a story in four parts. I. Whereupon Our Hero Does the Right Thing One of the most successful PC games of all time is Blizzard Entertainment’s StarCraft. It has sold approximately nine million copies since it’s release in 1998. It is, [...]

My Letter to Relic Entertainment

Since I frequently get reactions to things I write about on this blog (much to my surprise) I thought in light of my failure to get a response from Relic Entertainment I’d write them a letter and publish it here. Letters don’t usually have titles but if mine did it would be called, ‘Hi, I [...]

Why Doesn’t Word Do This?

This is a question. I use Microsoft Word almost everyday. I have a copy on my computer at home and another on my computer at work. Nearly every single person I know has a copy of it. It is the single most prevalent application I can think of that doesn’t come bundled with an operating [...]

(Slightly More) Constructive Criticism about GamerDNA

So I like Twitter. It’s a source of links, small nuggets of wisdom and also a place where you can vent to the world about whatever’s got your goat without needing to write it up all good and proper so it won’t look out of place on your otherwise tidy blog. (I expend literally hours [...]