It’s been 3 years and I’m still in absolute shock that we elected this person to lead our country. Political beliefs aside, he’s not someone I’d want running my HOA let alone a country.
Author: Daniel Andrews
Intel is destined to fail if Apple’s foray into computer chips succeeds
From The Next Web:
While Bloomberg suggests Apple’s inaugural processors won’t reach Intel-tier performance in higher-end models, the company remains confident it can leapfrog Intel’s technology in the long run. Whether that will happen remains to be seen.
I’d guess the first round will be in things like the Mac Mini, MacBook Air, etc.
Prepare for the Ultimate Gaslighting
From Julio Vincent Gambuto:
Until then, get ready, my friends. What is about to be unleashed on American society will be the greatest campaign ever created to get you to feel normal again. It will come from brands, it will come from government, it will even come from each other, and it will come from the left and from the right. We will do anything, spend anything, believe anything, just so we can take away how horribly uncomfortable all of this feels. And on top of that, just to turn the screw that much more, will be the one effort that’s even greater: the all-out blitz to make you believe you never saw what you saw.
I’ve already started seeing some content like this on the web and on TV. I, like everyone else, want to get back to “normal”, whatever that is. However, I do hope we try to be a slightly better version of ourselves as well and not try to paper over it with frenzied consumer spending.
HomePod now runs on tvOS, here’s what that could mean
Looks like there’s a move to unify HomePod and Apple TV under one OS to allow for older chip compatibility as well as (possibly) unifying for future hardware. I have guarded optimism that Apple is working on cleaning up their home strategy to compete with Amazon and Google in this space, but it could be nothing.
Learnings from a Decade of Remote Work
A rundown of some tips and tricks for remote work from one of my teammates at SalesLoft.
Speaking of contact tracing…
I saw this interesting comic posted on Kottke.org: Sounds like Apple and Google are doing something very similar with their announced BLE approach to tracing.
Continue reading →Google and Apple launching coronavirus contact-tracing system for iOS and Android
From The Verge:
Apple and Google will introduce a pair of iOS and Android APIs in mid-May and make sure these health authorities’ apps can implement them. During this phase, users will still have to download an app to participate in contact-tracing, which could limit adoption. But in the months after the API is complete, the companies will work on building tracing functionality into the underlying operating system, as an option immediately available to everyone with an iOS or Android phone.
This is super interesting. Contact tracing and testing are the 2 best bets to getting us back to a sense of normal. Glad to see the big guys are getting along and building tools that can make contact tracing easier. I love that it’s so privacy focused as well. The article goes on to point out some of the flaws in a system like this that could produce a lot of false positives or not provide the level of the risk involved:
The method still has potential weaknesses. In crowded areas, it could flag people in adjacent rooms who aren’t actually sharing space with the user, making people worry unnecessarily. It may also not capture the nuance of how long someone was exposed — working next to an infected person all day, for example, will expose you to a much greater viral load than walking by them on the street. And it depends on people having apps in the short term and up-to-date smartphones in the long term, which could mean it’s less effective in areas with lower connectivity.
Still, I’m heartened by the fact that the tech industry seems to be showing their promise during this pandemic.
Apple’s Ad-Targeting Crackdown Shakes Up Ad Market
From Tom Dotan, The Information:
“Apple users are more valuable [to advertisers] based on demographics, being higher income, et cetera,” said Jason Kint, CEO of industry trade group Digital Content Next. He argues that Safari users have been “wrongly devalued” in the short term and says marketers just need to find better ways to reach them online. As an example, Kint points to ads that relate to the articles someone is reading—contextual advertising—as a format that doesn’t run afoul of privacy issues. He says the format is growing and credits Apple’s clampdown for one reason.
Amen. Targeted advertising, for me, has never really provided any amazing value over your more standard ad placement. As much as I love seeing ads on every page I visit for the thing I already bought on Amazon, I’d prefer to see ads the publishers stand by on some level.
A couple of small changes to the site
Made a few small changes to the site today. First, link blog entry titles will now link out to the website I’m linking to. I also pulled in some Tumblr posts, sorry about the spam there. Since starting to try to write and link to content more, I’ve been working on ways to make it […]
Continue reading →iPad Main Menu — iPadOS 14 Concept
From Alexander Käßner:
This concept brings the main menu we know and love from Mac to iPad. It keeps the numerous advantages of a written menu, redesigned with touch devices in mind.
I love these concept pages. This one in particular is super thoughtful and answers for a lot of the issues that I run into (keyboard inconsistencies, lack of discoverable features) when using an iPad. Definitely worth watching the video at the end.