Red Rocks

Predictably Irrational

March 9, 2009

I am about 1/2 of the way through Predictably Irrational and am really enjoying it. While I think much of the topics covered fall into the obvious/previously covered category, it is interested to be reminded at how predictably irrational we truly are.

The first chapter ‘The Truth about Relativity’ covers concepts I’ve known (I’ve been known to (over)use the term ‘it’s all relative’), but provides empirical evidence that really demonstrates how predictable irrational behavior is. It really puts ‘keeping up with the Jones’’ in perspective.

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Kindle 2 First Impressions

February 25, 2009

I broke down and bought a Kindle.

My interested in eBooks started when a friend loaned me his Sony **Reader. It was cool, but not compelling enough. The first version of the Kindle was a breakthrough, but I held off for version 2. Well, version 2 is here.

My first impression when I saw the box tucked in my front door was that that can’t possibly be the Kindle, the box was too small! The packaging is great and certainly in the vein of Apple’s minimalistic packaging. The box contains three items, the Kindle, a combined charger/USB cable, and a quick start guide. The full users guide is an eBook on the Kindle (of course).

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Google cleans up URLs

February 12, 2009

I’m a little ‘uptight’ about URLs. I’ve blogged about my frustration with the Java Servlet mapping constraints before, and I’m a believer in W3C recommendations on URLs.

Google just announced a tool for Webmasters that allows users to specify a canonical URL for a single ‘page’, even if you can access it from multiple URLs. This is a nice patch for systems that don’t really conform to the above W3C recommendation but believe in the concept. It also helps clean up Google’s indexes, which is another good thing.

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Appcelerator

January 31, 2009

I came across Appcelerator this week (thanks Andy).

Appcelerator is an open source platform that provides everything you need to build rich web, mobile and desktop applications.
From what I saw Appcelerator is a thin layer on the Javascript API making it much easier to program. It also comes with a set of pre-defined effects that can provide some quick pop to your applications.

A great feature is the ‘Appcelerator in 5 Minutes’ demo. If you need 5 minutes with it to ‘get’ it, you’re a little slow. You can pretty much learn the model in 60 seconds there. The rest is seeing the scope of functionality.

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FeedBurner

January 21, 2009

I use FeedBurner to track the subscribers to this blog. Google bought them a while back and are working though the ‘digestion’ process now. They are now starting to transition FeedBurner accounts to Google account so of course I tried it out. The transition was easy (but slow, took over an hour for the 4 feeds I track) and they suggested that the subscriber stats would take a few days to level out.

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Transitions

January 20, 2009

Today is a day of transitions. I won’t get into the politics of it, but from a technology side, the new administration is up and running.

A blog! (rss) President Obama, or at least his administration is already up and blogging on the Whitehouse website.

The details…

  • RSS - The rss feed is summary only, not full text. You will have to click through for details.
  • .Net - The website uses .Net. While the main URLs (correctly) keep the aspx extension out, the RSS feeds all have the .aspx extension. You can also tell by the tag ids: ‘ctl09_rptNavigation_ctl02_rptNavigationItems_ctl01_hlSubNav’
  • JQuery - It looks like the Whitehouse site is using the JQuery JavaScript libraries
  • Webtrends - The government is watching you… We’ll see how the blog gets used over time. I will be disappointed if it is simply a channel for the press releases but I don’t expect the President to be blogging or twittering constantly either. I think he’ll stay plenty busy.

New Year, New Thoughts

January 4, 2009

Paul Kedrosky posts a list of things he’s changed his mind about this year. Did you change your mind about anything this year?

I agree with several of his points: too big to fail, ignorance, blogs, AM radio, Hedge funds, Buffett, This time it is different, and oil.

While I’m not convinced that phones do not require keyboards, I’ve certainly softened on that point. My wife’s new iPhone has my jealous of certain features, but I still love the easy one handed navigation of my Treo.

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Blogger Broken

January 4, 2009

I use Blogger to manage this blog. As someone who likes to be in control (but gets lazier over time) I use the FTP publishing option to have Blogger upload the appropriate HTML to my hosting provider so my blog uptime is not dependent on Blogger being up, and I can easily capture an HTML backup of my blog.

The one downfall to this approach is that when Blogger’s FTP publishing service is down, I can’t update my blog (without some non-trivial HTML editing). Unfortunately, the FTP publishing service has been broken/unreliable since before Christmas.

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Lehman Aftermath

January 1, 2009

A friend of mine worked for Lehman Brothers when they imploded this fall. He recently posted a look back at his experience and frustration with how things went down. It is a great perspective to remember all the people working hard inside Lehman and other firms and companies that are caught up in larger events.

One thing I found interesting was the similarities to Enron in the number of people who had a significant portion of their net worth invested in a single firm. It is easy to sit on the outside wonder how someone could bet their entire financial future on one firm, but as he pointed out it can be very difficult to stay diversified when so much of your compensation is tied to the firm’s stock.

Some of the guys were hit very hard. A lot of the bonus is paid in Lehman Stock, part of the 401K is in Lehman, the firm also promoted personal investing in the stock. All in all, if you were with the firm for 20 years, you have a major percent of your worth tied with the company, and then it’s gone.
Again, it is easy to second guess when you are sitting outside a firm, safely away from to Kool-Aid pitcher. It should serve as a second warning to others though. Diversify, diversify, diversify.

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Illinois Politics

December 10, 2008

Apparently being the governor of Illinois predisposes one to get indicted. For those not familiar, the last governor of Illinois, George Ryan, was convicted of racketeering, bribery, extortion, money laundering and tax fraud.

In comes Rod Blagojevich. Not exactly a popular or successful governor so far, and now an FBI sting reveals the depth of this guy’s insanity. He is trying to ‘sell’ the senate seat vacated by President-elect Obama (the Govenor has the power to appoint a replacment).

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