Savory avocado oatmeal: steel cut oats, salt, walnuts, raisins, avocado, lemon juice, milk, allspice
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Savory avocado oatmeal: steel cut oats, salt, walnuts, raisins, avocado, lemon juice, milk, allspice
Dirty Chai on Ice Double shot Pump of carmel torani syrup Fill half with third street chai concentrate Fill remainder with milk, heavily shaken first Dust top with cinnamon
Iced Reboot Double ristretto shot Splash of cream Low fat milk Sweetner Chocolate syrup Fill a chilled glass halfway with ice and pour in a freshly pulled double shot. Add a splash of cream and sweetner to taste. Vigorously shake the low fat milk and fill the glass. Float chocolate syrup on top of the milk froth. Enjoy rebooting.
The Perfect Old Fashioned
Sugar (small spoonful)
Orange bitters (2 dashes)
Angostura bitters (3 dashes)
Small batch bourbon (2oz)
Filtered water (splash)
Orange peel (thin slice)
Ice cube
Add sugar to the bottom of a glass with bitters and bourbon, swirling in glass until sugar is dissolved. Add a splash of water to taste, the orange peel, and ice cube. Enjoy with good company or a long to-do list.
Steve Jobs' plan to improve user experience (in 1980)
This talk given by Steve Jobs at Stanford in 1980 shows incredible vision for the products Apple was to develop over the next three decades. At the time, Apple was just 500 employees and had only released two computers: the Apple I and Apple II. Although Steve's talk starts off a bit slow, there are some particularly juicy parts worth watching.
At 11:52, Steve discusses his thoughts on how to utilize the progressive increase of computational power (Moore's Law). Rather than use a computer's additional raw power to increase the speed of an application (e.g. improve the speed of number crunching in VisiCalc), Apple will use it to "help the one-on-one interaction go smoother." In today's terms, what Steve is talking about, of course, is improving the user experience. For its time, this was a revolutionary line of thought, and one which allowed Apple to develop superior products (like Mac OS X and iOS) many decades later.
At 15:35, there's a great followup question from the audience on the same topic. Steve's response illustrates his vision for the perfect integration between hardware and software. Today, it only takes one swipe on an iPhone to experience Steve's vision. Yet he was able to articulate it over 30 years ago.
At 20:40, (my favorite moment) is in reference to the Apple II obsoleting the Apple I:
"I don't think we'll ever be in a situation like that again, of obsoleting a product."Â
Well, it turns out that Apple's consistent rate of innovation obsoletes many of its own products. But perhaps Steve makes good on this promise by shipping free software updates to old hardware: a practice that definitely breaks the industry trend. Or maybe, it's just the old reality distortion field at work.
Oppose SOPA with a letter via OpenCongress
If you haven't already, be sure to send a letter to your senators and representative expressing that you oppose SOPA. (There's a good summary from the EFF or an NYT piece on the bill to-date, among many others.)
Today, I came across OpenCongress to construct and send my letterâit's got to be one of the coolest and best gov2.0 web experiences around.
For instance, in a couple clicks I found out that one of my Senators (Boxer) has accepted literally hundreds of thousands of dollars from entertainment and media companies (the money force behind SOPA). With one click, I was able to automatically tell her I knew this in my letter, which I wrote in under 90 seconds.
All the OpenCongress data comes from the GovTrack, Sunlight Labs, and OpenSecrets APIs. And they offer an aggregated API themselves. Super cool siteâuse it!
The Things I Carry
I've always wanted to do this, and my recent bag switch was a good excuse. Here are the things I carry everyday. Click for a closeup!
It all comes to just under 14 lbs of pure nerd preparedness. Here are the specifics (BTW, I fully endorse every product I carry):
Chrome Night Citizen messenger bag
Marker, pen, pencil, extra lead, eraser
Sketch book
Right angle
Apple in-ear headphones
iPhone USB cable, iPhone charger
Cork screw
Nail clippers
Advil & melatonin
$0.79 in change
Glo & Ember Bontrager bike lights
Gerber Paraframe I knife, paper clip, hex wrench
Stack of membership & credit cards
Business cards
Apple Magic Mouse
Square card readers (x 4)
DVI, VGA, HDMI dongles for Mini DisplayPort
1/8" aux cable
Nyquil, Dayquil, Sudafed
Granola bar
Aveeno hand moisturizer
45W Magsafe adaptor + duckhead
13" MacBook Air + Rickshaw sleeve
Amazon Kindle 2
18oz Klean Kanteen water bottle + H20
Dental floss, chapstick, Wrigley's Spearmint gum
Fingerless gloves by etnies
Patagonia Torrentshell jacket
Quite possibly my all-time favorite Steve Jobs video. From WWDC 1997, Steveâs closing keynote. Itâs long, but shows such incredible vision, and it was 1997.
Steve Jobs
Steve has left his role as CEO of Apple and the internet is in a furry of sharing its many memories of his time there. Steve was my childhood hero, and continues to be a role model for many of my still-forming design, product, and business principles. Since I spent a few years at Apple and had a couple opportunities to be in close proximity to Steve, I thought I would share some memories too.
My first encounter with Steve was at Macworld 2007, after the introduction of the original iPhone, where I was covering the event for MacUser.com. Steve was out on the floor shortly after the keynote, standing a few arm lengths away. I was in awe of being so close to someone so famous, and whom I admired so greatly. He was being pestered by a few obnoxious âjournalistsâ (read: self-titled bloggers) and made some dry, snarky response to an even snarkier question. I didnât want to be one of them, so I just kept my distance and soaked it all up. I think my mouth was mostly closed.
By the summer of 2008 I had gone from Apple blogger to Apple Retail to Apple Intern. It was a marketing internship in IL3, and as far as I was concerned I was moving up in the world. One day, Steve was talking to the interns during lunch (his last time ever doing this) and my manager encouraged me to get to Town Hall early. I left the office around 10:30am and was of the first in line. It was completely worth it. I sat front and center (see picture below from 1st gen iPhone), soaking up every bit of Steveâs brilliance that I could. The best part, though, was when I asked him a question: Steve looked me in the eye and gave a long, thoughtful, almost spiritual response. I canât recall my question exactly, but I know it was something not about Apple, but about life. His answer, I remember, was about realizing he would one day die, and the subsequent affect of this realization on his life and career. I was in a daze, but somehow managed to make a followup comment and thank him for his response. Those few minutes made my summer.
My third memorable (and perhaps most embarrassing) encounter with Steve was the following summer, 2009, during my PR internship. I was caught up in work and went down to Caffe Macs for a late lunch around 1:30. I picked up some food and walked outside to the patio to enjoy the sun. Steve and Jony were sitting right there, looking pensive and talking about something important. I was starstruck but played it cool and sat a few tables down. I didnât look at my food even once (I think it was salad). When they got up for a walk through campus back to IL2, I casually got out of my chair, walked over to the table where they had been sitting, and sat in Steveâs chair. It was still warm. Yes, Steve and I shared butt-space.
I know that I am just one of many that feel so influenced by and connected to this man, and my stories are not the best or the most exciting, but they will live with me for the rest of my life. Without them, I wouldnât be where I am today, making software in San Francisco and dreaming of one day making something half as good as one of Appleâs products.
I wish Steve and his family the absolute best.
The Passionate Minority
As the debt ceiling gets a little higher, and schools around the country continue to struggle with budget cuts, Chrystia Freeland has proclaimed that 2011 will be "The Year We Gave Up On Government." Her piece furthers economist Albert O. Hirschman's conclusion that as frustration with a firm, organization, or state builds, there are two options for response: exit or voice. Jen Pahlka, our founder at Code for America, took issue with this conclusion yesterday in her post "Exit or Voice? How About Neither?". She argues that there is a third option: Make. As one of the 20 fellows in the inaugural Code for America class, and a graduate of an institution focused on producing active citizens, I could not agree with Jen more strongly.
There is a passionate minority aimed not at yelling or leaving, but rather at making change. Looking towards Boston, where I'm spending a few weeks working on the Code for America project, you can see this movement inside the City itself. Mayor Menino, a self-proclaimed "Urban Mechanic," has assembled a small, innovative team called New Urban Mechanics. The name alone is a powerful reference. Chris Osgood and Nigel Jacob, the team's co-chairs, pilot "civic innovations that offer the potential to improve radically the quality of City services."
Take for example an iPhone app that lets you share problems around your city, or software that uses the accelerometer in your smartphone to automatically identify and report potholes as you drive. While these early success stories in Boston are exciting and even sexy, they are just the beginning. The real challenge is finding ways to institutionalize this kind of innovation within government. With this in mind, one effort Chris and Nigel initiated this year is the Code for America project.
For its part, Code for Americaâan organization aimed at helping city governments embrace the webâis an interesting hybrid of inside-outside, bottom-up, and top-down. We technically work outside the city environment, hosting our products in the cloud and using modern web frameworks like Rails and Django, but with special access to city resources, officials, and data. The products we develop are brought to market both through official city channels and by targeting users (citizens) directly.
Our solutions range from big to small, and oftentimes are more about process and less about product. In Boston, we've developed a website that lets parents track their student's school bus in real-time. There's also a webapp for teachers to send out homework assignments to their classes via text message. Currently, we're re-imagining how parents research public schools in Boston and building an authoritative source for Boston's public data. In the private sector, the products we're making for Boston are services that consumers expect as standard. In government, however, it's a very different story: citizens expect inconvenience and inefficiency as standard. This is why the The Mayor's Office of New Urban Mechanics and Code for America are re-thinking and re-working how government interfaces with citizens.
But all this isn't just about Boston or Code for America. It's about a movement. As a graduate of Tufts, I've had the privilege of watching numerous civic-minded friends move into careers all similarly aimed at making civic change. My friend Ike is a CORO fellow focusing on ethical leadership and public affairs. David is developing a citizen-powered communications platform in Africa. Duncan is in Tunisia working on democratic elections. CJ is Teaching for America. Xavier is conducting research with the American Humanist Association. The list goes on, but my point is this: there is a movement, and a generation, passionate about change. We are working diligently (and sometimes discreetly) to make change around the world. The weird thing? It doesn't feel like anything special: to the passionate minority change is just another form of work.
This is the power of America. While we could yell or leave, many choose a third, far more powerful option: Make. And from my viewpoint, it looks like a new generation is just beginning its work.
This piece was also published on the Code for America blog on 8/9/11.
AT&T has all but officially killed unlimited iPhone data
Another nail in the coffin of unlimited data. AT&T:
Starting October 1, smartphone customers with unlimited data plans may experience reduced speeds once their usage in a billing cycle reaches the level that puts them among the top 5 percent of heaviest data users.
Unlimited throttle-able data is $30 a month, while 2GB unthrottled is $25. If you use more than 2GB, itâll run you $10 per additional GB, with no throttle threat. Or for $45 you can get 4GB with tethering enabled.
I donât know how much data the 95th percentile iPhone user consumes, but I do know that in my last 12 billing cycles, the most data I've ever used was 1.1GB (heavy travel + jailbroken tethering). Viewed another way, I just made a $60 donation to the de la Vega fund. RIP, unlimited data.
Just discovered! New feature in OS X Lion with Apple Remote Desktop: virtual display and multi-observe capability. Awesome. Now I can access a machine remotely without having to interrupt a user who might be using it. Or do a three-way screen observe to troubleshoot a problem. Anyone tried this yet? I don't yet have multiple machines running Lion for a test...
Lion: the Good, the Bad, the Ugly
By no later than 7:50am yesterday morning my Lion download from the App Store was finished. About an hour later I was running (a fresh install) on my 13" MacBook Air. Here are my first impressions of Apple's latest OS from the first 24 hours:
The Good
Mission control + gestures + fullscreen apps = technically three features, but all three work together so nicely that they feel more like one feature. Switching apps, workspaces, and views is far more fluid now and will only feel even better as I learn the gestures.
Mail.app is pretty good. I know most people use Gmail's interface nowadaysâI do tooâbut the new Mail is pretty well thought out. Love the threaded view, fullscreen optimization, link previews, and interface animations.
Resume is long overdue but finally here and done well. It's particularly great for saving Terminal and Safari sessions with multiple tabs. Or system state across a reboot.
The Bad
Launchpad is totally useless and kind of awkward. It doesn't feel integrated into the rest of the OS, which is really tight, but it does look damn pretty.
iCal is totally redesigned (over-designed?) and makes my calendar even more difficult to deal with than it already was, and for no good reason. It's short on new features but not short on new design.
Lack of 3rd party support for new OS features means that lots of Lion features are going unnoticed. I'm looking at you Adobe (think of autosave and gestures in Photoshop).
The Ugly
Inverting the scroll direction, which I'm forcing myself to learn, has been a significant pain. I know this is self-induced, but it really makes me wonder why Apple designed it "backwards" in the first place.
Wake from sleep on my MacBook Air is significantly slower than it was on Snow Leopard.
Animations seem buggy. I've noticed random black screen flashes and occasional sluggish animations.
DĂa Uno: Madrid, a set on Flickr.
I touched down in Madrid this morning at 7:30am. After the easiest customs experience Iâve ever had (I donât think the guy looked at me once) I hopped onto the metro to venture into the city. Destination roulette led me to Sol, where I could still see the remnants of the employment protests (http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/08/spain-protesters-dismantle-puerta-sol). Then paid a visit to Plaza Mayor, where I had blew-my-mind-amazing cafĂ© y tostada con tomate. I hopped back on the metro to Atocha Station to catch the AVE to Barcelona. After waiting in line for almost two hours to find out that only 1st class tickets were left (fuck that) I opted for a later ride instead. I killed time drinking Amstel at a nearby bar and stole some local residentâs wifi. Next thing I remember is waking up as the AVE was approaching Barcelona. Sad I missed the beautiful 2.5hr ride, but I guess that's what happens after being up for almost 36 hours straight. Found my hostel, showered, and met some people. Tomorrow: Barcelona.
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