Archive for May, 2008

Maybe Gas Prices Will Switch us to Metric

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

I have a rather bold prediction. We mainly us the “standard US” measurement system of gallons, inches, miles, etc.. but soon I believe we will no longer use gallons for our fuel measurements.

Some gas stations are going to wake up soon and undergo a marketing change. Unless there is some legislation that I am unaware of that prevents this, they will likely switch to litres. A gallon is ~3.785 liters. Most Americans don’t know this. Consumer response to the “cheaper” option of $1.05/liter vs $4.00/gallon would be likely strong.

Driving down the road you don’t have time to do math in your head quickly and multiply by 3.785. Consumers would likely see $1.05 and pull over to get that as opposed to $4.00. Same “cost” but it’s for the same reason that most airlines show the prices before $50 of tax. You know the cost is the same, but you’d rather mentally go for what’s “cheaper”.

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Digg is about the Money

Monday, May 12th, 2008

I’m really sick of Digg. Not only have the stories gotten crappy, but it’s become more about bait-and-switch links than a porno site. Honestly, I think that 90% of the submission have been gamed to hit the front page so that someone will get a ton of traffic and a few hundred clicks on their banners/ads or other affiliates. I don’t like being advertised to and this is getting really bad.

I’m wondering if the Digg algorithm that affects what gets on the front page should try to figure out how many ‘tracked’ affliate outbound links there are and push those down a bit.

A huge percentage of the stories are to sites with “lists” of products, websites and services that you should buy. All of them are a bit suspcious to me. I get a strong sense that many were put together by a “social media” company that’s “using blogging for brand recognition” or that it’s just paid advertising slots. Basically, asides from the rare story that links through the WSJ/NYT there’s nothing of journalistic integrity coming out of these links.

Everyone’s out for their own best interest and in some cases even violating SEC laws. One article about Apple’s speculative stock price from Macnn.com says, “Shaw Wu of American Technology Research… suggests that the potential market could “more than triple” in 2008, from 150 million people to approximately 470 million.” It doesn’t tell what his company’s and family holding are in the stock. This might as well be a pump and dump scam by Digging it up.

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Blog under construction

Monday, May 12th, 2008

I’m trying to 100% redo my blog. It’s going to be a mess for the next week visually. Coming soon are categories, better entries, a better look and better functionality. Wish me luck

Five Sites I Can’t Stop Going To

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

While very productive and an amazing tool; the internet helps me waste time in a way that not even TV was able to. So what are the sites that I end up wasting my time on? And as a better question, what do you waste your time on?

  • Digg: I hate this site. I really do. I use Reddit on occasion too, but for whatever reason Digg keeps pulling me back. Half of the stories are worthless crap, and the other half are inaccurate and sensationalized. I guess it’s like the internet version of a tabloid newspaper like the Boston Herald. It’s not quality, but you keep reading it when you want to kill a few minutes and some brain cells.

    Why I don’t stop reading it
    : For me the internet isn’t actually information overload. Being a child of the 90’s has given me a massive thirst for data/information. Digg keeps this flow going for me. I love Slashdot, but there’s just not enough unless I’m drinking from the firehose. But more than anything, I feel that if I don’t read Digg/Reddit that I’m behind or miss something. I feel this horrid need to be 100% on top of every internet fad/trend and piece of news. Sigh.
  • Gearslutz: This is just a webboard about recording music and gear. It’s not the best out there, but at the same time offers so much. It’s full of some great people, and also full of morons and newbies with mBoxes and pirated versions of Fruity Loops.Why I don’t stop going there: I feel that I am a semi-respected community member and occasional troll on there. It’s fun. I like keeping on top of engineering even if I am no longer doing it professionally. Plus, they have a great classifieds section.
  • CNN: Some days I think this is worse than Digg and less accurate. It’s near the level of Fox News. Yet, I check it at least once a day. It’s like not understanding why you wash your hands or pull out your hair compulsively. It really is a sickness that I wish would go away. Maybe I should block it from my router.Why I don’t stop going there: Occasionally, and I mean super-rarely they have something that’s worth reading. Also, unlike the NYT they have a ton of video daily that I can watch when my hair is drying from the shower.
  • Slashdot: The Original Time-waster. The firehose has made it that much worse since I don’t have to wait for them to actually approve articles prior to reading them.Why I don’t stop going there: The comments. Each news thread has generally at least 100 comments, and they are much better structured and generally more intelligent (or at least at a moderation of 3 and above) than Digg or elsewhere.
  • New York Times: This to me is real news. I wish I could afford to have it delivered every morning, but I’d also hate to kill that many trees. Maybe if I get a Kindle I’ll read it even more (that isn’t a good thing).Why I don’t stop going there: Because it’s actually decent reporting. I feel that some of the “lifestyle” articles get repetitive, but overall it’s also a great conversation piece. It seems that everyone I’ve been on a date with in the past few months reads it daily, so it’s something easy to reference. It doesn’t change fast enough for me (I mean it’s real writing though, so that’s to be expected since they actually edit their stuff unlike CNN).

Yes, I know that I could put many of these into an RSS reader and digest them that way, but there is some enjoyment I find to going to the actual websites.

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Open Office 3 beta released! Works with Mac!

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Umm, pretty much just what the title says. It’s smooth, it’s good, it’s free, it’s beta. Run, go get it. Kick MSFT in the balls. Who needs their Office?

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