http://unthinkability.com/
If you don't know who Mr Scott Fletcher is, you are missing out. Visit his blog and listen to his new podcast, Unthinkability, where he reads his Twitter posts out loud with way more enthusiasm than is necessary! 5 thumbs up!
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Consider my mind BLOWN!
http://www.buzzfeed.com/expresident/15-songs-you-didnt-realize-were-covers
Buzzfeed is right. I had absolutely no idea that those songs were covers! Especially Instanbul. I figured that was 100% They Might be Giants.
The original version of Cum on Feel the Noize is really good, and I thought the Quiet Riot version was good.
Wow, craziness.
Buzzfeed is right. I had absolutely no idea that those songs were covers! Especially Instanbul. I figured that was 100% They Might be Giants.
The original version of Cum on Feel the Noize is really good, and I thought the Quiet Riot version was good.
Wow, craziness.
IT'S ALIIIIIVE!
http://arstechnica.com/apple/reviews/2011/01/mac-app-store-hands-on-many-nits-to-pick-but-off-to-a-good-start.ars
If anybody has been following the Apple news lately, they finally launched the Mac App Store this morning at 12:01AM. Some of you may be thinking: "Doesn't Apple already have an App Store?". Why, yes, yes they do. This Mac App Store is essentially going to be a Digital Delivery Service for Macintosh software much like Steam is a digital delivery service for PC games.
I think this is a step in the right direction for pretty much all software-based purchases. The faster our broadband gets and the more connected we are, the more feasible this idea becomes. We already have Hulu, Netflix, Steam, Xbox Live, Playstation Network, iTunes and more. The idea of a physical store will most likely not pertain to any kind of software anymore.
Let's just hope we can improve our internet infrastructure exponentially within the next 10 years. The recent fights going on in Congress and Senate about Net Neutrality are not filling me with much confidence. On one side of the argument we have the government yelling about how terrible the telecom corporations are for wanting to divide their service into smaller "pipelines" and charge based on what sites/services you are using. On the other hand we have the corporations yelling that they don't want the government to mess with their business, because we all know that the government is pretty much incapable of doing anything right. They have spread themselves too thin already.
We do need more ISPs to provide more competition in some of the less populous states. In Iowa we have either Mediacom Cable, or Qwest DSL for broadband. Unless you are one of the lucky people near a fast DSL node your connection will be terrible and cable is almost always the better, faster, more reliable option. So, essentially, we have a broadband cable monopoly here. If what I learned in high school was right, then a monopoly is unlawful. I have a hard time trusting that a government maintained internet service would be anywhere near as good as many other advanced countries in the world (Japan).
Anyways, enjoy your new Mac App Store and hope for more awesome in the future!
If anybody has been following the Apple news lately, they finally launched the Mac App Store this morning at 12:01AM. Some of you may be thinking: "Doesn't Apple already have an App Store?". Why, yes, yes they do. This Mac App Store is essentially going to be a Digital Delivery Service for Macintosh software much like Steam is a digital delivery service for PC games.
I think this is a step in the right direction for pretty much all software-based purchases. The faster our broadband gets and the more connected we are, the more feasible this idea becomes. We already have Hulu, Netflix, Steam, Xbox Live, Playstation Network, iTunes and more. The idea of a physical store will most likely not pertain to any kind of software anymore.
Let's just hope we can improve our internet infrastructure exponentially within the next 10 years. The recent fights going on in Congress and Senate about Net Neutrality are not filling me with much confidence. On one side of the argument we have the government yelling about how terrible the telecom corporations are for wanting to divide their service into smaller "pipelines" and charge based on what sites/services you are using. On the other hand we have the corporations yelling that they don't want the government to mess with their business, because we all know that the government is pretty much incapable of doing anything right. They have spread themselves too thin already.
We do need more ISPs to provide more competition in some of the less populous states. In Iowa we have either Mediacom Cable, or Qwest DSL for broadband. Unless you are one of the lucky people near a fast DSL node your connection will be terrible and cable is almost always the better, faster, more reliable option. So, essentially, we have a broadband cable monopoly here. If what I learned in high school was right, then a monopoly is unlawful. I have a hard time trusting that a government maintained internet service would be anywhere near as good as many other advanced countries in the world (Japan).
Anyways, enjoy your new Mac App Store and hope for more awesome in the future!