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Aug 03 2010

Apple iPad vs. e-Readers Nook and Kindle: Do You Read?

There is something satisfying about burning through the pages of a paperback book. You get to see how many pages you are wizzing through. And if the book is really good your anticipation of the beginning and ending is bittersweet. Maybe they will write a sequel, or another set in the same universe. This is how I always felt about Phillip K. Dick books. Enter the eReader opportunities. Hey a complete book for 5 – 10 bucks! That sounds like a deal to me. Let's see what the different products might offer.

The nook, the kindle and the apple ipad

For compact, lightweight and long battery life: the Nook and Kindle might be choices, IF… All you want to do is read eBooks or eMagazines. The Barnes and Noble Nook adds some color and what they are calling FREE WIFI for $149. The black and white Amazon Kindle is about the same. Both products are advertised at getting the WIFI, and the Kindle even adds a cellular variety for off-the-map places. BUT… Again, if you are happy with black and white and are satisfied with your WIFI providing only books, well you might consider looking on Craigslist or eBay for the first two. I doubt you will see discounted iPads until the next generation comes out sometime before Christmas 2010.

So I recently finished my first full book on the iPad. It was inside the Kindle software provided by WhisperSync, whoever they are. I was able to buy the book in the Kindle store as a Kindle. I'm not sure if Amazon notes that I am on an iPad or not. To them it is a sale either way. And for purists, perhaps the eInk is nicer to read from in a well-lit place. But the glow of my iPad display was refreshing and crisp. I still missed not being able to see the thickness of the pages left to go. It's like, not being able to see how much further you have to go. You can jump forward in the software and look how many pages, and the iBook software on the iPad tries to give you a good sense of where you are in the book, there is nothing like the smell of ink and paper and that satisfying thump when you toss the book off the bed at 2am having just finished a page burner.

Okay, you are going to have to pay more for an iPad. But what you are getting is a full-blown computer. A great web-browsing device. I halfway descent email reader and all the same books you can get on your kindle and more. Apple makes the FREE books from Project Gutenberg very easy to find.

I have read books in both the Kindle-emulator and in Apples iBook format and they are almost identical. Apple has a nice feature where you can tone down the bright white into a sepia-toned beige that is easier on the eyes. Like a somewhat aged paperback.

So I will confess today to buying two paperbacks from Amazon (piggy-backed on a different order) and one Kindle book to read on my iPad.

In conclusion: The iPad is not going to fit in your pocket or small purse. If you carry an iPad you are going to have to lug around more than either the Kindle or Nook. Much more. And sometimes the iPad feels heavy when you've been holding it a certain way to read in bed. So for that reason, you can take a Kindle on the plane, on vacation and probably not have to pack a powercord. But the chord is pretty tiny. And with the iPad you have GAMES, full-Web access, email… Did I mention GAMES? The iPad will play every game made for the iPhone except at 2X the size. (I think that's in the hundreds of thousands at this point.)

But seriously, if all you want is a good book and the simplest thing to read it on, the Nook or Kindle might be your choice. And if you forgot to pack enough to read, or if you get bored with what you brought any of the three can download a new book for about $10 bucks in about a minute. Or on the iBooks store on the iPad you can get thousands of great books for free. Think Emerson, Whitman, Joyce… All copyright free.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/eReader-review

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Feb 07 2010

iPad Pre-Order Coming to Amazon: They'll Sell you an Apple iPad, Kindle or Nook (for now)

Category: iPad-iWay!,social media,speed the web,tech opinionjmacofearth @ 4:15 pm

So a funny thing happened when Steve Jobs said the iPad would be shipping in 60 days. Everybody went out to the net and tried to pre-order one. Well, you can't order it on Apple's store yet. And the best you can get is having Amazon send you a note when you can actually order your iPad.

I find these screens humorous as well as revealing.

Apple iPad pre-ordering via Amazon, gonna kill the Kindle and Nook

For now you can get a Kindle or subscribe to a "when available" email alert.

Screen shot 2010 02 07 at 9.18.13 AM iPad Pre Order Coming to Amazon: Theyll Sell you an Apple iPad, Kindle or Nook (for now)

Uh… No, I didn't mean iPod. I was looking for an iPAD, as in… new!

hh

apple ipad bags, cases and accessories available now on Amazon.com

And no… I didn't mean Kindle either.

iPad on Amazon, there are so many to choose from, which do you want?

Actually there are plenty of images available. I guess since they can't take orders they are not hyping the pics either.

pre-order your iPad on Amazon, sure, do it, why not?

So I'm letting you know I'm on every "let me know when I can pre-order" list I can find. (apple.com and amazon.com) Do you know of any others?

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/ipad-preorder

Apple turns a $3.8 billion profit last quarter.

I don't agree with any of these, but you might as well see'm: TechHail: Why You Shouldn't Buy an iPad

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Jul 05 2009

Cisco Draws a 4 Tier Map of the Clouds and the Future of Cloud Computing

Category: tech reviewsjmacofearth @ 11:04 pm

The Four Tiers of Cloud Computing according to Cisco.

Picture 11

[Excerpt: from the Register: Cisco cuddles all clouds but one]

Clouds mean a lot of different things to a lot of different people. Warrior explained that Cisco sees cloud computing as having four tiers. The lower tier is an IT foundation, including servers, storage, and networking, and that the whole point of UCS was to be a player for infrastructure. In this area, Cisco plans to compete with IBM and Hewlett-Packard as well as partner with EMC, VMware, Microsoft, and others.

The next tier up is what Warrior referred to as infrastructure as a service, which means selling cloud computing capacity like Amazon does with its EC2 compute utility and S3 and EBS storage utilities. Warrior showed a slide that pegged Amazon, AT&T, BT, HP, IBM, Sun Microsystems Oracle, Savvis, Telstra, and Terremark as the key suppliers so far. And Cisco will not be one of them, even though it must be tempting to build a cloud at cost and sell capacity on it.

Now, taking a step up in the abstraction layer of Cisco's cloud computing model is something Warrior called platform as a service, and this is really providing cloud infrastructure with software development frameworks that allow companies to deploy applications. This is more like Google App Engine, Windows Azure, and certain parts of Amazon Web Services, and in Cisco's case, the application framework is WebEx Connect, which is evolving from the online Web meeting platform of the early 2000s into a collaboration framework with APIs for integrating other applications into the Web conferencing, chat, and collaboration tools that can be mashed up as IT organizations see fit.

The top and final tier of the cloudy world that Cisco is helping us all build is software as a service, and here, Cisco absolutely has plans to be a player alongside Microsoft, Salesforce.com, and Google. Up here, WebEx will be the brand. WebEx Mail, a mail and calendaring service based upon the PostPath acquisition from last summer, will be added to the WebEx mix and delivered as a service atop Cisco's own cloud infrastructure. Dennerline said that WebEx is hosting 220,000 meetings per day and over 4 billion meeting minutes per month and that this was supported from nine data centers around the globe. He added that there are over 450 million knowledge workers on the planet and that the collaboration software and services space would comprise about $34bn in sales and that "we certainly don't have our fair share yet" of that space. As for how Cisco will get its fair share, it's the same old mantra: build, buy, and partner.

I think that's a pretty good demarcation of the space.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/4-clouds

Other cloud posts

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May 27 2009

Music Discovery and Community – a Sub-Semantic Connective Network

Category: social mediajmacofearth @ 8:32 pm

[Sub-Semantic: my own word, meaning sub (below) semantic (meaning) music networks]

Update: Today I turned off my Blip.fm to Twitter connection. While I was enjoying the DJ aspect of Blip, I was also aware that the "value" of my Tweets were NOT in musical recommendations. So rather than flooding my twitter stream with blips I am now keeping Blip to itself and adding them to my FriendFeed stream rather than broadcasting them on Twitter.

There is a universal thread that is beginning to run through many of my networks. I call it Music Discovery, but it goes by the names of Blip.fm, Last.fm, Bebo, Pandora, Reverbnation (on Facebook) and many others. And what makes this network different from any others is the nature of the connection is MUSIC. I will cover each of these services in subsequent posts.

So unless you are in the music business, there is no ROI on participating in this game. But what it has given me, in terms of "discovery" over the last three years is amazing and I wanted to share a bit about how the services work. If you are not a music fanatic, then you might want to skip off to another post. But if you are interested in finding new songs, new bands, and exploring the non-business aspect of social media, then this could be fun.

For this first post I am going to share my newest favorite Blip.fm and the most recent blow-your-head-off discovery that I made using Blip "Again And Again – Bird And The Bee" http://ff.im/-38KTY

Here's how that looks in my tweetstream. (not anymore, see update above)

tweetin again and again

And on Blip, if you are looking at the a playlist, it would look like this:

picture 34 Music Discovery and Community   a Sub Semantic Connective Network

Or on the public timeline, it would look like this.

picture 33 Music Discovery and Community   a Sub Semantic Connective Network

So imagine a Twitter timeline, that is just passing songs that people are promoting as virtual DJs. TweetJays perhaps.

So here's a look at the public timeline, and the magic that is Blip.

blip-public

It looks like Twitter doesn't it? So the cool part is the little red "play" link will start the song immediately, no lag. So scrolling down the list, I can choose a familiar song, CSN's "Teach Your Children" or I can click on a song/artist I've never heard of. And from this process alone, I have discovered the following bands/songs recently. And these are the ones that have floored me with their originality.

I might have heard OF them, or heard ONE of their hits, but these bands are now in my high rotation slot. [Okay, so here's where the business comes in, Blip does make it easy to BUY the music, with handy links to Amazon and iTunes. And I highly recommend you buy them. But listening on Blip.fm is FREE FREE FREE, kinda like Radio.]

So here's what a blip looks like as I am creating it:

me blippin

And let me dissect the blip for you. Nada Surf – the band, "Always Love" the song title, @lucianan the person who bliped the song originally, I am REBLIPPING his selection and thus giving him credit (just like a ReTweet but a ReBlip). then I give a short snippet of the lyrics that are meaningful to me "to make a mountain of your life is just a choice" and finally, I am leaving @lucianan's comment in what looks to be Portuguese. And when I hit the OK button, it puts my blip on the public timeline and it also blips the song to my Twitter stream. [I am thinking about this, because I usually control my Tweets pretty judiciously, and I am not sure about the "value" of putting all my musical blips out there, but I'm still thinking about this.]

I would like to hip you to a couple of bands I have been grooving out to, and longing to sound like, but probably won't.

  • Silversun Pickups – Catch and Release
  • Nada Surf – The Voices
  • Ken Andrews – Alergic (an in the studio look on YouTube)
  • Band of Horses – Is There a Ghost (on YouTube)
  • Snow Patrol – Open Your Eyes (on YouTube)
  • Minus the Bear – Studio Promo (YouTube)
  • Future Clouds and Radar – The Epcot View (Robert Harrison was the primary song writer for Cotton Mather)
  • Porcupine Tree – Arriving Somewhere But Not Here
  • Sunny Day Real Estate – Television (an acoustic session on YouTube)

I think these bands and songs sort of typify the term "darker side of pop" that I use in conjunction with Buzzie. Cause I'm Pop and I'm Rock and I'm Americana and … And I want to ROCK darker!

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/blip-fm

You might be able to find most of these on my Blip.fm playlist.

Also of interest might be:

And the two seminal books on music as life are:

This Is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession

This Is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession

The World in Six Songs: How the Musical Brain Created Human Nature

The World in Six Songs: How the Musical Brain Created Human Nature

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future posts

A Collaborative Space: WebEx, Go-To-Meeting, Skype, Basecamp (Teaming/Meeting Tools)
Twitter Problem: How do you find enough interesting people to follow? Then how do you keep up with them?
The Agile Mind: Construction, Evolution, Care, and Feeding Instructions for Mental Flexibility

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