When will we expect Motorola to call a press conference to deal with this? Will there be a recall?

201007201726.jpg by jnyemb

Screengate: Motorola Droid X users complain of defective screens, severe banding (with video)
[Via MacDailyNews]

“A number of early Droid X adopters are documenting serious graphical or possibly electrical problems with the handset’s giant screen,” Sean Hollister reports for Engadget.

“While we don’t know how widespread the issue might be quite yet, symptoms include rapid flickering and vertical banding over all or part of the 4.3-inch LCD,” Hollister reports.

[More]

Luckily, they are sold out so perhaps this problem can be fixed soon. But having an unusable screen seems to be much worse than seeing some attenuation of a cell phone signal.

Isn’t instant news on YouTube wonderful for quality control? I guess if this blows up for Motorola that is a good thing. It means people actually care about the Droid X.

A good day for Apple

Apple demolishes Street, posts new Mac unit sales record; shares jump in after-hours trading
[Via MacDailyNews]

Apple today reported earnings of…

[More]

Wow. 3.5 million Macs. 3.3 million iPads. 8.4 million iPhones. iPod sales down somewhat but still sold 9.4 million. Over $4 billion in cash generated in one quarter.

Nice to see some good news. I wonder what other new stuff they have coming out. I’d expect the iPad to be ‘refreshed’ to include cameras so that it can use Facetime with iOS4. Probably in the Fall-Winter timeframe.

They asked Jobs to wear a suit?

‘I’m Going to Go Call Ralph and Yell at Him.’
[Via Daring Fireball]

Fascinating piece by Fred Vogelstein for Wired magazine on the Apple-AT&T relationship:

In a bid to avert the looming problem, a team headed by senior vice president Kris Rinne met with Apple to ask for help. Of course AT&T was planning to upgrade its network to handle the increased demand, Rinne’s team told Apple executives, but that was going to take years. In the meantime, would Apple take measures to help throttle back the traffic? Perhaps Apple could restrict its YouTube app to run only over Wi-Fi. Maybe the iPhone could feature a smaller, lower-resolution videostream or cut off YouTube videos after one minute. Rinne, who had already met with Apple’s iPhone team at least half a dozen times, fully expected the company to play along. After all, manufacturers agreed to such restrictions all the time. It didn’t make sense to build phones and offer features that carriers couldn’t support.

But in meetings with Apple engineers and marketers over the subsequent year, Rinne and other AT&T executives discovered that Apple wasn’t playing by traditional wireless rules. It wasn’t interested in cooperating, especially if it meant hobbling what had quickly become its marquee product. For Apple, the idea of restricting the iPhone was akin to asking Steve Jobs to ditch the black turtleneck. “They tried to have that conversation with us a number of times,” says someone from Apple who was in the meetings. “We consistently said ‘No, we are not going to mess up the consumer experience on the iPhone to make your network tenable.’ They’d always end up saying, ‘We’re going to have to escalate this to senior AT&T executives,’ and we always said, ‘Fine, we’ll escalate it to Steve and see who wins.’ I think history has demonstrated how that turned out.”

And:

They have even fought about wardrobe: When an AT&T representative suggested to one of Jobs’ deputies that the Apple CEO wear a suit to meet with AT&T’s board of directors, he was told, “We’re Apple. We don’t wear suits. We don’t even own suits.”

[More]

How out of touch can you be to suggest Jobs change out of his trademark turtleneck and jeans? This whole story demonstrates the total difference in world views between American telcos and Apple.

I would imagine that Verizon would be having similar problems. The telcos have always gotten their way as they hobble wireless in America, compared to many other countries.

Will an apology by Contador be enough?

You’ve got to love the internet. Contador has done something unique in my experience. It deals with his actions today in the Tour de France. He has posted an apology video on YouTube.

He must have heard an earful from the peloton. So he uses YouTube to make a very public expression of regret. He states that maybe he made a mistake and that he is sorry. He gives a mea culpa apparently captured by a handheld videocamera in his room!

Think of that. The night of a potential error of character, he posts a video, from a small room in France, saying he was sorry and reminding people that Fair Play is very important to him.

This could simply not have happened in any previous Tour. The technologies were just not there. Now the whole world hears his apology.

I have to say I am really impressed. He says he made a mistake. He reminds people of the things he has done in the past that demonstrate his recognition of Fair Play. He hopes he and Andy will be okay.

Will it be enough? Perhaps. I think he would show real class if he lets Schleck regain the jersey tomorrow and then crushes him in the Time Trial. That is just me. The peloton will decide shortly.

But this is a very unexpected event and I am sure will make some ripples in the peloton.

What if you had a writing competition and no one entered

HG Wells writing competition demands handwriting, no science fiction; no one applies
[Via Boing Boing]

A writing competition held in HG Wells’s honor demanded that entries be handwritten (“to address the low standard of literacy and handwriting these days…it’s an important art in itself and many of our most famous authors find that’s the best way to do creative writing.”) and that they treat with subjects other than science fiction (“Last year there were plenty of entries because the competition was open to writers of all ages and stories could include science fiction, depicting ghastly invasions of our everyday lives by all sorts of nameless horrors.”).

Unsurprisingly, the contest did not get a single entry.

Budding young writers were invited to send their short stories creating a picture of contemporary life in Kent, to Reg Turnill, a former BBC aerospace correspondent who as a young reporter interviewed Wells.

But due to what Mr Turnill now believes were over-strict rules, he has had to change the entry conditions.

[More]

I had to laugh. I wonder of Wells would have appreciated the irony? I’m sure satirists such as Twain or Menken would have.

Ecosystems are very dependent on the species that inhabit them

Overfished ecosystem held together by a single species
[Via Ars Technica]

When an ecosystem becomes overfished, some species may be able to step in and fill the food chain gaps until others can recover, according to a new study published in Science. The bearded goby, a fish that lives off the coast of southwest Africa, has become the predominant prey species in the area because the rest have been overfished. The goby should be threatened under the weight of so many predators, but it isn’t—in fact, researchers find it’s doing better than ever, thanks to its ability to adapt while supporting the rest of the region’s food chain.

The coast of southwest Africa used to be home to one to some of the most successful fisheries in the world. Fishing boats collected huge amounts of sardines and anchovies, the base of any self-respecting predator’s food pyramid, until the species became heavily overfished. Now, the waters are dominated by jellyfish, unsuitable for eating by most predators in the area.

[More]

Yes, that is a pretty obvious statement I made but it is fascinating to me that in the ecosystem discussed above, one species is finding a way to fill the niches that we have emptied by overfishing.

Darwin envisioned an ecosystem like a plank of wood with hundreds of wedges pounded into it. A strong ecology resulted in little room between wedges and little ability of individual species to really change the niche the ecosystem provided them.

But here, changing condition has removed many of the wedges, allowing those that survive to move into other areas not normally allowed in a health environment, where others might outcompete them. Here we have a species that was already predisposed for the altering conditions, has changed its behavior to adapt and become very successful covering a whole new niche.

So, under conditions that destroy many species, one is surviving. This suggests that the entire ecosystem, while greatly harmed with reduced diversity, will be able to survive in some form.

Then, as time progresses, natural selection will provide other species to fill the unused niches found here.

Life will always find a way to replenish a devastated ecosystem. It can just happen a little faster with these sorts of bridge species.

Posted in Science. Tags: . 1 Comment »

Contador needs to let Schleck have the yellow jersey back

peloton by mikebaird


Contador should show some real leadership tomorrow – He needs to let Schleck beat him tomorrow, in order to win. [A longer version of this post is at SpreadingScience]

Contador may have to make abeyance to the peloton for what he did today. Otherwise, there could be some really dangerous times ahead for him. The peloton is not happy. I think he may purposefully give back the yellow jersey tomorrow to Schleck.

Contador, who is such a good time trialist that he can probably overcome a 90 second deficit in the last time trial later this week, broke a major peloton rule today. The yellow jersey, Andy Schleck, attacked on a steep hill and slipped a gear, forcing him to stop. Contador took unfair advantage of this mechanical problem to take the yellow jersey away.

I have watched the replays several times to see what happened next.

The ‘rules’ state that no one else attacks until the yellow jersey regains his bike. You do not take unfair advantage just so you can wear the yellow jersey.

Another rider, Alexandre Vinokourov, had been sprinting with Schleck. He immediately slowed down. As expected.

Not Contador. From several meters behind Schleck, he attacked hard, passing the yellow jersey and continued on. Well after Schleck was obviously in trouble. By doing this he violated the rules and put himself into the yellow jersey at the end of the day. Schleck tried hard to come back but was not allowed to by Contador.

Interestingly, Vinokourov showed the honor and respect usually displayed by race leaders. He is on the same team as Contador and could have kept up with him. Having a teammate along with him would have helped Contador gain even more time.

Instead, Vinkourov finished in the same time as Schleck. He did not take advantage of the mechanical failure. He followed the ‘rules.’

When Contador put on the yellow jersey, I heard audible boos from the crowd, the first time I had ever heard such a thing. There was a lot of unhappiness all around. Schleck vowed revenge.

Contador is only 8 seconds ahead of Schleck. He should be able to make up a lot of time in the time trial. Tomorrow, he could sit back and let Schleck pick up 30 seconds or so, putting things back to where they were. Schleck puts on the yellow jersey, things are back to normal, the peloton is happy and Contador comes out looking great, displaying the honor and leadership the peloton looks for.

And he can still win it all at the time trial.

Contador has shown himself capable of fixing things when he breaks a rule. He did this on an earlier stage when circumstances made him pass and beat a teammate, one who had been out in front for some time. A Tour leader does not need to win every stage to win the Tour and usually the other team members are allowed to win a stage to reward them. But Contador took that away from his own teammate, who was visibly unhappy at the result.

What happened the next stage? Contador and the other team members made sure that this unhappy teammate was rewarded. They made sure he won the next stage.

Interestingly, the unhappy teammate was Vinokourov, the same one who followed the rules today. Perhaps Contador will again fix things. That would be really amazing.

[More about the rules of the peloton and community at SpreadingScience]

Posted in General. Tags: . 3 Comments »

Andy says it

Andy Ihnatko on Antennapalooza
[Via Daring Fireball]

Andy Ihnatko:

Steve Jobs didn’t fall to his knees, rend his garment, clap his hands together, and beg for forgiveness from users and stockholders.

This has upset many people.

These people are idiots.

[More]

Andy Ihnatko has always had the best view on Apple. Be sure and read his excellent column in the Chicago Sun-Times. Here is a taste:

When I was preparing my review, I discovered the loss-of-signal problem almost immediately. But I only experienced it sporadically. It’s irrelevant to me anyway: I actually prefer to carry my iPhone in a bumper case. And the remainder of the iPhone 4’s improvements — the new display, the new camera, the faster 3G upload speeds (by a factor of 4) and the improved WiFi and GPS radios — more than make up for that 1 dropped call in 100.


Great argument against dogma

The Ascent of Man was one of my favorite documentaries and had a great impact on my views as a scientist. This is one of the best parts of it:

The Green Lantern Uniform is awesome but I loved it for infra-yellow

Ryan Reynolds’ Green Lantern costume revealed! [Green Lantern]
[Via io9]

Ryan Reynolds' Green Lantern costume revealed! Check out your first look at Warner Brother’s new Green Lantern costume, on the cover of Entertainment Weekly. So what do you think of our new Hal Jordan? Should those who worship evil’s might be worried? UPDATE: More images added.

Click on the image for the super high res. version. The Green Lantern EW issues is on stands July 16. And will also have a sneak peek at Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Thor, Tron: Legacy and more. [Thanks Denise!]

[More]

Green Lantern was actually my favorite DC comic in the 70s. A man whose sheer will allowed him to do incredible things. But there were always such silly things happening – io9 has collected several.

One particular Green Lantern panel has stuck with me for over 30 years. One that was so silly that I laughed out loud at the time. We would just call it “Show Logic” now. Luckily, someone else has posted it.

infra-yellow

The relevant transcript: “No wonder my ring has no effect on the creature! It’s giving off an invisible golden light — a sort of infra-yellow color -!*
*Editor’s Note! Just as infra-red is invisible red light so infra-yellow is invisible yellow light!

The need for the editor’s note to explain things is pure genius. Not only do they completely make something up, they have to stop the story to explain it to us, in a way that is some sort of pidgin science. It’s like even they knew it was too silly to let fly past without some sort of explanation.

“Just as infra-red …” almost sounds reasonable but is just so wrong. Wouldn’t it be cool though if there was such a thing as infra-yellow?

To this day, I use the phrase ‘infra-yellow’ to refer to any sort of outrageous technobabble statement on some science fiction show.

I really hope they find a way to include infra-yellow in the new Green Lantern movie.

It’s like Old Spice Guy is a friend

Goodbye Old Spice Guy
[Via Boing Boing]

Old Spice Guy retires from the phenomenally successful viral marketing campaign, just as things were at their hottest. Here is his farewell video. I will be sad to see him go, but I’m grateful that he departed so thoughtfully before setting off a global thermonuclear war and bacon shortage.

And he leaves us with an SEO memento: “silverfish hand catch” is now indelibly etched into Google.

[More]

The entire set is addictive, as I wrote the other day. The one he did for his daughter is really sweet and very manly. And the comments at Boing Boing also had this nice homage for a college that includes a lot of elements of the original but with an nice twist:

My Old Blog

I checked out my old blog site today. I’m always glad it is still there. I had it over at Userland for a long, long time. It still pops up as the number one hit for my name so anyone searching for me finds it first.

It is nice that even though it is no longer hosted at Userland, it is still available on the web. I just wish I could update it somehow – while it does not cost me anything to host these pages, I have no control over putting up new pages now – and bring it a little bit back into the new world. It is like taking a nostalgic trip back in time.

One of these days it will be gone I am sure. But until then, it is comforting to still see.


Good meetings are a community affair

[Crossposted at SpreadingScience]

meeting by clagnut

Death by committee. Rethinking the art of getting things done.
[Via Creativity Central]

“A committee is a group that keeps minutes and loses hours” – Milton Berle

Who would have thought that Uncle Miltie would be the voice of common sense when it came to that hallowed gathering of people called the committee.

Lewis Thomas, the late great physician, poet, administrator (Dean of Yale Medical School and New York University School of Medicine and President of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Institute) and sublime essayist — wrote a telling and insightful essay called On Committees.

“The marks of selfness are laid out in our behavior irreversibly, unequivocally, whether we are assembled in groups or off on a stroll alone…thus when committees gather, each member is necessarily an actor, uncontrollably acting out the part of himself, reading the lines that identify his identity.

This takes quite a lot of time and energy, and while it is going on there is little chance of anything else getting done.

Many committees have been appointed in one year and go on working well into the next decade, with nothing much happening beyond these extended uninterruptable displays by each member of his special behavioral marks.

If it were not for such compulsive behavior by the individuals, committees would be a marvelous invention for getting collective thinking done.

But there it is. We are designed, coded, it seems, to place the highest priority on being individuals, and we must do this first, even if it means disability for the group.”

Thomas, owing to the breadth of his experience in academia and the government, probably spent more hours in committees than was humanly possible.

The questions he posed nearly twenty years ago are still relevant. How might we improve how committees work. He cited work done by the RAND Corporation in the ‘60s called the Delphi Technique. Which is an elongated version of what we now call the Idea Exchange.

Members would answer key questions individually. Answers would be circulated to all members as a catalyst to refine their answers again. After three cycles, they would discuss as much of a consensus as could have been reached.

The process worked well because it mitigated somewhat, the need for “self” performance. Thomas continues “What Delphi is, is a really quiet, thoughtful conversation, in which everyone gets a chance to listen. The background noise of small talk, and the recurrent sonic boom of vanity are eliminated from the outset and there is time to think.”   

[More]

Good committee function is a necessary requirement for any sort of adaptive company. Successful meetings must be actively facilitated, either by trained specialists (not often) or by properly educated members of the committee.

Also, there needs to be a strong negative feedback that strives to get rid of meetings. Meetings need to have a defined purpose, one that either deals with short-term emergencies or regular information transfer.

It needs to be cultural.

When I was working at the bench, we would have meetings twice a month for each project. Since most of us were working on 2 or more projects, you could easily have to be ready for two meetings a week. Including prep time, this could be a lot of time and productivity lost to meetings.

The project chairs ran each meeting and the purpose of the meeting was purely information transfer. It was up to the project chairs to fill the time and if it was not filled in a productive fashion, they heard about it. They were to make the meetings worth OUR while, not purely to stroke their own egos.

We all felt it was better to cancel a meeting than to get everyone together for a lot of unimportant drivel.

We worked to kill unproductive meetings. We all did.

Organizations need to strongly present controls on meetings that serve no useful purpose. They need to permit people to stand up in a meeting and ask “Why are we here?” and require the members to have strong reasons for attending.

Meetings, when done well, are incredibly important. They can rapidly collapse social networks, providing huge amounts of information to rapidly traverse the organization. As the above post stated:

The best committees I have participated in or led, have immediate (urgency) goals. This ad-hoc, short term approach energizes the group.

When AgriLife Communications as Texas A&M University was faced with preparing Texas communities for two destructive hurricanes — the result was some remarkable, effective work across an entire state in very little time.

Build accountability into every meeting. Set a goal for that meeting and designate an individual to evaluate that meeting for immediate and actionable feedback.

It is up to everyone to make sure meetings are more than a waste of time. Simply getting together is not good enough. it is an active process.

And when done well in this fashion, there are few processes that can create a successfully adaptive organizations faster.

Will there be liveblogging?

Apple to Hold Special iPhone 4 Press Conference on Friday
[Via Daring Fireball]

Jim Dalrymple:

Apple would only say that the press conference would be regarding the iPhone 4. No other information was available when I spoke with them tonight.

[More]

I want to feel that I am almost there. It would be nice but I figure Apple will employ something to prevent it, in order to totally control the message.

[UPDATE: According to Brainstorm Tech, there will be live blogging. I will be in front of my computer. Hope the event does not bring down the INternet, as previous ones have.]

Signal loss in the iPhone is a feature that could help us lose weight

obese by Tobyotter

Apple is really providing a great business opportunity for someone – use the signal attenuation feature of the iPhone 4 to determine how much fat someone has on their body. Help us lose weight.

For over 20 years it has been known that different body compositions result in different electrical impedances.

Bioelectrical impedance analysis is used to determine fat content. It examines the flow of electricity through the human body. Different fat contents provide different impedance readings.

People with higher free-fat mass have lower impedance levels. More fat, more impedance and greater loss in signal. Handheld devices to measure this can cost a fair amount of money.

Impedance is how the radio signal of the iPhone is attenuated.

Someone should develop an app for the iPhone. The Death Grip becomes a positive feature not available in any other phone. Simply hold the iPhone the ‘right’ way and the loss in signal can be used to determine how fat you are. The greater the signal loss, the more fat is present.

Then use this to keep track of how well your weight loss program is doing.

See, Apple really wants to help us lose weight and become less obese. And no other cell phone, not an Android or a Blackberry, can do this as well as the iPhone.

[This is only slightly snarky. It may be that people with different impedances due to body fat affect the attenuation of the signal differently but I do not think the iPhone would be sensitive enough to be very accurate. Maybe someone with more expertise could tell me differently.]

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