New email rules

Wish certain someones at work would learn it:

Some tips for writing brief emails:

  • Skip the subject line.
  • Keep it to a few sentences.
  • Skip the greeting.
  • Skip the sig.
  • Narrow the topic.
  • Edit.
  • Consider not sending.

the art of brief emails

Dilemma

The HTC Leo / HD2 looks terribly awesome, but no hints yet on when it will (if ever) come to the US. AT&T will have this little beaut, the Tilt2, available this month. So tempting.

WinMo goodness…

The hotness…

“The HD2 is confirmed as having a 480×800 WVGA screen and a slim 11mm shell. It’s powered by a hugely powerful 1Ghz Snapdragon CPU. The HD2 also has 448MB RAM, 512MB ROM, WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1 with EDR and A2DP, 5 megapixel camera with dual LED flash, G-sensor, compass, GPS, 3.5mm audio jack and a microSD expansion.”

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/coolsmartphone/huIR/~3/PoEOPbxn43w/news5139.html

Photo from SlashGear

Bad news for monkey boy

“Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer received a 5.5% decrease in his overall compensation last year as the company suffered its first-ever drop in overall revenue, according to documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission Tuesday.”

But hard to believe that it’s taken this many years for Microsoft to take a loss.

[http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9138725/Microsoft_s_Ballmer_finds_wallet_a_little_lighter?source=CTWNLE_nlt_dailyam_2009-10-01]

Monkey Dance:

And a classic Apple riff:

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Categorized as Microsoft

More phone than player

I see a lot of people with iPhones, but rarely see them listening to music on them. Guess that’s more of a side benefit since it’s more about the apps now.

Wireless Carriers

The following is as article from Mike Elgan posted on ComputerWorld on 2009.08.15. I couldn’t agree more.

Wireless carriers: 10 things I hate about you

The companies that provide cell phone voice and data make their billions by cheating. They must be stopped.
Mike Elgan

The consumer electronics scene in the U.S. is wonderful and horrible at the same time. The devices, technologies and innovation are wonderful. The provision of wireless access is horrible. U.S. carriers are some of the most backward, unscrupulous and anti-customer companies in the nation.

So, carriers, this column’s for you. Here’s what I hate about how you do business.

1. You overcharge for service
A recent survey by Nielsen found that low prices for wireless service is the No. 1 thing customers want from carriers. Yet this is exactly what U.S. customers aren’t getting. According to a new survey from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the U.S. is in the top three most expensive countries for wireless service worldwide (Canada and Spain are the others). According to the report, Americans pay an average of $635.85 per year for cell phone service (compared with $131.44 per year in the Netherlands). Why do Americans pay five times more for cell phone service than the Dutch?

2. You’re a global laggard in new technologies
Dropped calls, lack of service, nonexistent coverage in many rural areas — the inadequacies of U.S. wireless services are well known. But what really irks mobile enthusiasts is the slow rollouts of new technologies. The most bleeding-edge phones are rarely, if ever, sold in the U.S. In Japan, people are routinely using 4G services, watching TV and using cell phones as credit cards. If U.S. carriers are charging the most for service, why are we getting the least? Why are we always behind?

Sure, you’ve got a dozen excuses why the U.S. market can’t support new technologies the way European and Asian markets do. Making up excuses is something you’re really good at. Providing new technology, not so much.

3. Handset discounts are a shell game, not a ‘subsidy’
Like so many of your standard policies, the subsidizing of cell-phone handsets (and increasingly netbooks and other mobile broadband devices) is presented as a benefit, when it is, in fact, another way to get more money out of us.

If cell phones weren’t subsidized, then we’d know how much we’re paying for the phone and how much we’re paying for wireless services. With the subsidy, we have no idea.

You’d probably pay $599 for a new iPhone 3GS with 16GB of storage. But for eligible customers who sign a new, two-year contract, the subsidized price is $199. Do you think AT&T spreads the $400 difference over the life of your contract? Or is it $600? $800? How much are you paying for that discounted phone? You won’t and can’t ever know. Subsidies don’t save you money. They cost you money. The business model is to prevent you from knowing the price of your handset so you can’t make an informed decision.

The truth is that the word “subsidy” doesn’t describe the pricing. Nobody is subsidizing your phone. A subsidy is when one organization — say, the government — provides money to another organization or person to encourage some form of behavior. Some farmers, for example, get a subsidy from the government to grow certain types of crops. Food stamps for the poor are a subsidy.

When you get a “discount” on your cell phone, YOU pay the difference, not the carrier, not the handset maker. Sure, they’ll bury the costs in a muddled monthly bill. But believe me, you’re the one paying.

4. You seek new ways to get money for nothing
New York Times columnist David Pogue launched a high-visibility effort last month to address just one of the many ways carriers shamelessly take money away from customers for nothing. Pogue noticed that most of the carriers have mandatory, 15-second voicemail instructions that are played after your own voice-mail message is played. For example, Verizon plays: “At the tone, please record your message. When you have finished recording, you may hang up, or press 1 for more options. To leave a callback number, press 5.”

Everyone already knows how to leave a voicemail message. Apple required AT&T to drop the requirement, for example, and somehow iPhone users are still communicating with each other.

Pogue estimates that Verizon, for example, takes $620 million a year away from customers for all the collective “minutes” required to listen to these messages. That’s just one carrier, and just one example of how carriers make money by optimizing what they call Average Revenue Per User (ARPU).

Another example is SMS. On average, Verizon, AT&T, Sprint Nextel and T-Mobile rates for sending SMS messages have doubled over the past three years. It costs carriers about one penny to send each SMS message, but some now charge customers about 20 cents. During this three-year period, the cost to carriers to deliver SMS messages most likely stayed the same or declined, but all four carriers doubled their rates. I believe the most likely reason for the price increases was to persuade customers to choose all-you-can-eat bundled deals, which tend to cost about $20 extra per month.

And yet another example is the charging of minutes for both parties for each call. In Europe, the caller pays minutes for the call, and the receiver pays nothing. In the U.S., both caller and callee pay.

Carriers employ experts to examine all the angles to figure out which combination of bundles and packages and pricing will extract the most money from each customer. It’s not about charging more money for better service. It’s about charging more money for the same service.

5. You want to lock me in
Remember when we could sign up for a one-year contract? Why did carriers eliminate that option? The reason is that locking in customers for two years is twice as good for the carriers as one year. They make more on early-termination fees. They get to create the illusion of lower monthly prices by spreading the cost of a handset discount across 24, rather than 12, months.

Carriers collude with handset makers to artificially link handsets to specific carriers. The iPhone on AT&T is one such example of collusion, as is the Palm Pre on Sprint and the G1 on T-Mobile. Carriers and handset makers create these fake limitations for precisely the same reason movie theaters don’t let you bring in your own food — because it creates mini-monopolies that enable gouging on prices. Why do you think 10 cents worth of popcorn costs $4.50 at the megaplex?

In some European countries, this practice is considered anticompetitive and is against the law.

6. You aggressively oppose net neutrality
The degree to which carriers want to reject net neutrality, which is little more than fair and equal Internet access, was revealed this month when AT&T and Verizon (and Comcast) rejected $4.7 billions in grants — not loans, grants! — in government stimulus money because they stipulated fairness in the provision of services.

Why would corporations reject free money? Because they’ve reasoned that they’ll make more than $4.7 billion from you and me by rejecting the fair, equitable provision of mobile broadband services.

7. You want to lock out competition
I don’t know if it was AT&T, Apple or both that decided that the Google Voice app should be banned from the iTunes store, but locking out services that threaten total control is standard operating procedure in the U.S.. wireless carrier industry. Competition and innovation is the last thing carriers want. So they use their ownership of the wireless pipes to block the applications and services that would need to move through those pipes.

8. Your solution to public opposition is more lobbying
As the public becomes increasingly outraged at the carriers’ unethical, shameless and anticompetitive actions, their response is not to improve behavior, but to spend customers’ money on hiring lobbyists to influence Congress and the White House. In a recession, when companies are cutting back and laying off workers, both AT&T and Verizon are increasing the millions spent on hiring lobbyists to influence the government.

9. You’re growing too powerful
With nearly every netbook, smartbook, eBook reader, GPS device, digital camera and wristwatch poised to potentially support mobile broadband wireless connectivity, the carriers are positioning themselves to seize control of the consumer electronics industry. They want to become the electronics superstores, extending their abusive business model beyond cell phones to encompass every future device with a wireless connection.

10. You’ve forgotten that we own the airwaves
Cell phone carriers have rights, too. They own the towers and the servers that make wireless voice and data connectivity possible. They have the right to use their capital as they please, charge what they like and offer whatever combination of prices and services that the market will bear.

But all that equipment is useless without access to the airwaves, which are by law owned by the people. And that’s what makes the wireless carriers business different from other industries. Companies that are granted licenses to use the publicly owned airwaves should be required by our government to meet certain standards of fairness, equal access and competitiveness. That’s not happening right now. It’s time to let your state and national politicians know that you want this industry reined in.

Mike Elgan writes about technology and global tech culture. Contact Mike at mike.elgan@elgan.com, follow him on Twitter or his blog, The Raw Feed.

Just one thing

There are many days where I just want to get one real thing accomplished while at home. Finish a project or get a  big part of one done, do something worthwhile with one of the kids, get a task done around the house, just something…

545

I don’t usually get too political but this article is too good not to save. It’s a rewrite of an article that Charley Reese wrote back in 1985 (based on his wikipedia entry and an online copy of the Stonewall County Courier) called “The 545 People Responsible for All of America’s Woes.” So some of the more current names have been updated as well as the 300 million population number, and a few paragraphs near the end have been added at some point (by someone, maybe not even Reese).

545 PEOPLE

By Charlie Reese

Politicians are the only people in the world who create problems and then campaign against them.

Have you ever wondered, if both the Democrats and the Republicans are against deficits, WHY do we have deficits? Have you ever wondered, if all the politicians are against inflation and high taxes, WHY do we have inflation and high taxes?

You and I don’t propose a federal budget. The president does. You and I don’t have the Constitutional authority to vote on appropriations. The House of Representatives does. You and I don’t write the tax code, Congress does. You and I don’t set fiscal policy, Congress does. You and I don’t control monetary policy, the Federal Reserve Bank does.

One hundred senators, 435 congressmen, one president, and nine Supreme Court justices — 545 human beings out of the 300 million — are directly, legally, morally, and individually responsible for the domestic problems that plague this country.

I excluded the members of the Federal Reserve Board because that problem was created by the Congress. In 1913, Congress delegated its Constitutional duty to provide a sound currency to a federally chartered, but private, central bank.

I excluded all the special interests and lobbyists for a sound reason. They have no legal authority. They have no ability to coerce a senator, a congressman, or a president to do one cotton-picking thing. I don’t care if they offer a politician $1 million dollars in cash. The politician has the power to accept or reject it.

No matter what the lobbyist promises, it is the legislator’s responsibility to determine how he votes.

Don’t you see now the con game that is played on the people by the politicians? Those 545 human beings spend much of their energy convincing you that what they did is not their fault. They cooperate in this common con regardless of party.

What separates a politician from a normal human being is an excessive amount of gall. No normal human being would have the gall of a Speaker, who stood up and criticized the President for creating deficits.

The president can only propose a budget. He cannot force the Congress to accept it. The Constitution, which is the supreme law of the land, gives sole responsibility to the House of Representatives for originating and approving appropriations and taxes.

Who is the speaker of the House? Nancy Pelosi. She is the leader of the majority party. She and fellow House members, not the president, can approve any budget they want. If the president vetoes it, they can pass it over his veto if they agree to.

It seems inconceivable to me that a nation of 300 million can not replace 545 people who stand convicted — by present facts — of incompetence and irresponsibility. I can’t think of a single domestic problem that is not traceable directly to those 545 people. When you fully grasp the plain truth that 545 people exercise the power of the federal government, then it must follow that what exists is what they want to exist.

If the tax code is unfair, it’s because they want it unfair. If the budget is in the red, it’s because they want it in the red. If the Army & Marines are in IRAQ, it’s because they want them in IRAQ. If they do not receive social security but are on an elite retirement plan not available to the people, it’s because they want it that way. There are no insoluble government problems.

Do not let these 545 people shift the blame to bureaucrats, whom they hire and whose jobs they can abolish; to lobbyists, whose gifts and advice they can reject; to regulators, to whom they give the power to regulate and from whom they can take this power. Above all, do not let them con you into the belief that there exists disembodied mystical forces like “the economy,” “inflation,” or “politics” that prevent them from doing what they take an oath to do.

Those 545 people, and they alone, are responsible. They, and they alone, have the power. They, and they alone, should be held accountable by the people who are their bosses — provided the voters have the gumption to manage their own employees.

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Categorized as Article

A day in the life

It’s really great to have family and friends who are wishing me well this past weekend and today. It might be downhill from here but it sure seems to take a lot more work just to keep up.

Road hazard

I do a fair amount of biking in the summer, both on trails but mostly paved country roads. What I can’t understand cruising along the road is seeing little piles of animal poo near the edge that I have to avoid. What kind of wild vermin needs to take a dump up on a road? Possum? Raccoon? Rabid coyotes? So… they’ve got hundreds of square miles of fields and woods out there and they have to hold it until they can get up to this very unnatural, man-made strip of asphalt with rolling death-machines on it, just to drop a load?? Maybe that explains all the roadkill.

Yup, too much time to think about this kind of stuff out there, burning up the miles…

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Categorized as Biking