This work?
Category: Main
Blogging from the iPad 2
Getting some breakfast, iPad on the 3G, and using the new WordPress iPad app.
So far so good – even can see stats, pages, comments and such…
Damn – this might get me blogging again…
Trying my new theme
I need to blog more but been too busy.
So I put in a new theme.
http://store.informationarchitects.jp/product/ia³-template
and upgraded wordpress
maybe I should blog next?
On the road again…
I have not been blogging much – I think it was mostly out of respect for the japanese tragedy. Blogging or writing anything about myself or what I was doing paled in comparison to the real world and what people in Japan were contending with. Blogging was silly.
On top of that been super busy at work, traveling like a mad man and working on lots of little interesting projects. All good – just slammed.
Koprol team been rocking – check the blog.
Been on a string of speaking gigs lately – The Mobile Marketing Conference. Also been lucky to get some nice quotes – Abs-Cbn Article. Hats off to all the hard working yahoo! folks who make it possible for me to enjoy the limelight.
Have another trip to the USA coming and some more speaking gigs – work is just a super fun place right now. Feeling amazingly fortunate.
Just a side note – why does it take me longer to enter America as a US Citizen then it takes to me enter Singapore where all I possess is a lowly employment pass? America needs some help but I feel totally at a loss to decide in which ways I can assist. Singapore might feel small and boring at times but I am stunned by how progressive the place is with the net connectivity, the ease of dealing with taxes and the growth – stunning.
I picked up an iPad in sing just after the iPad 2 was released. My gf is using it like mad now since my bro, @groovemonkey, picked up an iPad 2 for me in SXSW. I hardly used the iPad 1 but I can’t get enough of the iPad 2. Writing this column on it now using iA writer. Love this freaking app. I am also on a plane, in economy, drinking a Jim beam black and ginger ale (sing air rocks for having this booze), but I feel comfortable flipping open my smart cover and banging away on the fake keyboard. I never opened my laptop in economy since it is just too much a pain in the ass.
I have tried the galaxy tab, the xoom (doomed), and some of the clones. Nice if you want the notion of what a cheap pc clone was in the 90’s but just not that elegant. I can’t get emotionally invested.
Apple set the bar high – good luck to the others trying to beat it. Competition is amazing but it stuns me how msft has no play in tablets. Poor Balmer.
And yes – I used to have a newton.
I thought it was amazing.
Peace
No – I am not there.
I am not in Austin. I could have went on my own or somehow maybe made a work trip out of it but then it would be like going to Mass but not actually being a Catholic. It appears to me that everything that comes out of SXSW is mostly US focused and continues the silicon valley reality distortion field.
I am trying to focus my product expertise on emerging markets and apart from the global phenoms that take over the world there is still a lot of action in the area of things built and bred for iBRIC. Maybe I am all wet but that is where my passion lies.
Bumped into this article today: http://gigaom.com/2011/03/10/dispatch-from-sxsw-have-startups-become-a-fetish/
The thousands of startups today that are pitching themselves at app competitions or in industry conferences all seem to think being a startup is enough. That daring to come up with some idea, any idea, and build a beta site is enough. That the users will come and then the business model will come and then the money will come. Google, Facebook and Twitter are their icons. Somehow the act of creating a startup has become the goal instead of the building of a business. As this post in The Awl points out, there are now startups built to merely create launch pages for your startup. (The Awl highlights LaunchRock, but Prefinery is another. I can’t believe there is a me-too startup even trying to build a market for startup launch pages.)
Tend to agree with that for the most part.
We talked a bit about this on TWIA #86 last night. Nice work @mikefoong on all the formats. There is an idea that around SEA startups start just so founders don’t take normal jobs since not having a startup means u might not be cool. These people that start these startups are running around using SV products all day long and then they wonder why their startups never go anywhere.
Reading this: http://blog.jayteebee.org/2011/03/foursquare-facebook-founders-and.html
I can’t agree with all of it but I think he has a point here:
The Passion Gap is evident when you see a founder or product manager so deeply engaged in their product that they can’t help but think about it all the time, and, as a result, they see all the fine details that are required to make a product that exactly matches what the market needs. This is true even when the market hasn’t yet realized the need.
Most people lack that passion – that commitment – a sense of conviction. They just want to do a “startup”.
This is a good one too: http://scripting.com/stories/2011/03/09/theLimitsOfTwitterAndFaceb.html
Are we in a bubble? Yes, this is a bubble. All the frenzied startup activity and still the VCs raise more money to invest. Not enough inventory. We need more young people to play the role of entrepreneur. It’s so analogous to the real estate bubble where the only bad bet was to own the actual real estate because that was so real. The money was being made off the lies. In this bubble the people who are going to get hurt are the legions of young people. Most of them aren’t entrepreneurs. As a percentage of the population, the people who really have the drive and fortitude to stick it out is infinitesmal. But that isn’t the myth — it’s also like the housing boom where everyone could be a home owner. In 2011 every young person can be an entrepreneur, esp if he or she knows how to code. That’s the bubble, right there.
We live in truly interesting times…
An Adventure
As usual when I am stateside, which means I get Singapore Airlines asking for a letter of invitation and Homeland Security forcing me through secondary immigration – I have been trying to make sure that I visit my sole remaining Grandmother each time. I don’t remember my dad’s dad – I was too young when he died. The next one to go was my mom’s dad – the one I really knew as Grandpa. I can’t easily describe how he came to America but the details behind this man are slowly unraveling but we will probably never know the rest of the story. I miss my Grandpa terribly – he was a jolly man to be around. My Dad’s mom was the next go and she was a quirky woman who loved playing cards, drinking beer and watching boxing. If she were still alive I am sure she would get a kick out of the pictures of me and Manny Pacquiao.
So all that is left is my mom’s mom – Grandma. All of her brothers and sisters lived to a good age and Grandma is the last one – over 90 and full of stories. I somehow wish I could do some sort of Vulcan mind meld and just download bits of her life and memories into my head. Sounds weird but I know that when she passes that will be the last of the data from that generation. It saddens me quite a bit.
Visiting Grandma though is an adventure in and of itself. A year or so back the family decided that Grandma needed more care than any relative or friend could give her at home. It is always tough to come to that decision but seeing Grandma in a managed care home is an easy reminder that it is the right place for her and that she is doing well. Yes – none of us want to be there but sometimes that is the only option. She is still smiling though, gets her hair done regularly and likes to complain a lot. All old Italian women complain so this is normal and a good sign.
The fun part is dealing with the rest of folks at the home. There is the old Italian lady who appears to lecture use every time in Italian. She speaks English and is a likeable gal but seems to fall back to talking to us in Italian. I have no idea what she is saying but I just smile. There is also the lady who seems to think we all work at the place – she asks us why we think it is okay to stand around. Then she proceeded to tell my Dad that he will always be a private with no hope of promotion given his work habits. I was going to laugh but honestly I am afraid of this chick so I kept a straight face and did not reply.
I could go on but needless to say I always feel pretty blessed about my life and family when I visit my Grandma. I also remind myself that my life is pretty damn good.
peace
The Thrilla in Manila!
Just got back from a week in Manila – the epicenter of the Philippines. Had not been in a while but was excited to get back and work on some on the ground product execution. Manila is mostly known as the land of the call centers however the startup environment continues to grow slowly but surely. Not sure it will ever be as dynamic as say Singapore – but there are signs of life.
As with any large country there is an ecosystem all to its own with nary a care to expanding outside of PH – that is fairly typical of all the large countries in the region. There is a big enough domestic market with high barriers to entry that some companies can just concentrate on the PH market entirely. I would put Sulit in this category – focusing on listings for the PH market. Seems to be taking a fairly dominant share of the c2c category.
Then you have the global players who have fallen from on high to focus on countries or regions where they seem to have taken a large local position, even if by accident, but are going to alter their strategy to focus on a particular regional niche. I would put Multiply in this group. They seem to have a large user base in both Indonesia and the PH market. Seems they are going to focus on ecommerce and primarily b2c. You may recall that both Sulit and Multiply are now majority owned by MIH (Naspers). MIH seems to be focusing on emerging markets ecommerce plays. Time will tell if this pays off but it feels like a sound bet.
If you don’t know who MIH is you can listen to this podcast to get the scoop since these are some heavy hitters.
Recently Multiply announced that Jack Madrid, formerly of Yahoo PH, is joining as the country manager. We will miss Jack and wish him well in his new venture. It will be interesting to see how Multiply heads off in their new direction.
However most of this activity is based on old companies or fairly entrenched ones just maturing and focusing. All good but I am still not seeing anything really exciting when it comes to cool plays in PH. The one company I was really hoping to show the way has chosen to leave Manila and setup shop in Singapore – Insync. They took some money and are moving their HQ to Singers. I can see why but it shows that the funding environment, the employee base and the regulatory/IP environment is probably not a safe bet in the Philippines. This might change but for now in places like Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, and Philippines – it is probably a safer bet that if you want a regional shot at the champ you are better off heading to Singapore.
Hell even the champ himself see the bennies of taking the fight to Singapore…
Real Things
First post of the new year – I have decided that less is more in general. The idea of always being plugged in, turned on and consuming info is just weird to me. So in consuming less I am probably going to produce less, quantity that is, but I think less is more. We shall see.
Having tooled around Northern Thailand this past few days I feel even more convinced that GPS devices are awesome but could do so much more. I found myself using the iPhone and the GPS to find stuff and drive. Searching with iPhone – getting there with the GPS. The GPS guys could fix this since I don’t see that getting there with the phone is an option.
Been spending some super quality time with the rents the past few weeks – been awesome as usual. It always reminds me that time is the most valuable thing in life. I think the tech world tends to not value quality time and we just spend more time in front of a machine pretending to socialize but truly not socializing at all. Pathetic it is. So time is important and doing things you love with people you dig is all that matters. Wealth just makes that easier but wealth for the sake of just having money makes no sense to me. Having money and no time is also painful.
Being part of this problem myself I find that so much of what we do is just not real – only bytes of information that many times has nothing tangible to show for it. Hence being with family, reading, riding the bike and making a meal just feels so much more real. Which is why I love when something internet related leads to real things.
Nothing seems to be doing that better right now than Kickstarter and with all the hype over companies worth millions but actually don’t make anything I want to bring the attention back to real companies.
I helped with Diaspora which got me a t-shirt – a very real thing.
My iPod Nano watch kit – TikTok. Very real and BTW I think the people complaining about the iPod as a watch are being premature since this is the first pass at real wearable computing – imagine this thing having a map or making a call someday. Apple will be there first and I would rather have an Apple product strapped to me than something Microsoft or Google would come up with.
I was getting a Kickstarter email update and the founder mentioned this company – I had to have a pair. They look cool, are made in America and seem to be tackling a real problem – there are no good flip-flops anymore. Teva has lost its soul, sad but true and most of the other stuff either falls apart, reef, or is just not comfy – Croc and Havaianas.
This stuff looks awesome and if it means this company gets off the ground then even better. Sign me up. Can’t want to get my pair with my name on them.
So if the internet can help real people make real things for real usage – I am stoked.
Now – let me get back to generating some bytes.
😉
Thoughts on GPS…
Having had mobile GPS units for some years – coupled with experience using both an iPhone and a Nexus One – I thought I would chime in on a few thoughts I have been banging around. First off – mobile phones won’t replace real GPS units anytime soon for those who seriously get off the beaten track a bit. Not so much explorers per say but people who might be in foreign countries and need to try their best not to get lost. For this type of cruising around, especially on a motorcycle, stand alone or purpose GPS units have no equal.
First off let’s state that smart phones with maps are awesome – no doubt about it. For pre-planning, walking around a city or for searching for things, GPS units suck at this, I find my iPhone a critical mobile asset. My Google phone was cool as well but so far I tend to get more mileage out of my iPhone since my life is not played out in the Google cloud which makes an Android based phone less appealing. The convergence of wireless with maps – plus the ability to make calls is great and I am sure will get better. However strapping a phone to the handle bars of my bike while I explore Southeast Asia will never happen. Simple as that.
Given this though I am surprised the Garmins of the world, my chosen GPS company, don’t realize that convergence, ease of use and adaptability are key. So here is what I wish Garmin would do to make my exploring even better.
This is not listed by importance but just some thoughts:
- Add Wi-Fi. How hard can it be? I don’t need the phone, I don’t need email but browsing might be handy in a pinch since exploring the maps on a GPS device is not easy. What I want the Wi-Fi for though is to be able to download new functionality, update the maps, buy new regions and maybe someday use the power of the Internet to enhance the experience. The idea that I have to hook up to a PC to update my maps totally bites.
- Make browsing maps easier and make searching easier. Typos, hard to spell street names and the way regions work makes it hard to locate something you are trying to find. Simple universal search box would be cool.
- Make saving trips with waypoints, not just destinations, much easier. If the Wi-Fi was there allow me to back up my device to the cloud.
- Make it easy for me to get from point A to point A but highlight cool things along the way, plot a course to them but keep me heading to point B. It is all math right? Point is I need to get to where I am going but the device could do better at helping me to enjoy the ride and see things I did not know where there. The attractions function works but only when you stop and you can’t control the radius. Works but could be much better.
- Allow me to ping the web somehow to finds things that are around me – I think tomtom does some of this but clearly much more could be done to use the Internet to find interesting things created by users. This could dovetail with users sharing routes – I would even pay for this.
- If I had the Wi-Fi, browsing, and some way of sucking things in – let me grab a route and plot it on the GPS since the direction capabilities on purpose built devices are top notch.
These are some ideas that would allow guys like Garmin to prosper even in the face of smartphone competition!
Android versus iPhone
I won’t get into the nuances of Android OS versus iOS since this is not meant to be a technical dissertation. I remember an old buddy of mine constantly arguing with another buddy about PC versus Windoze. He used to say – everyone drives a Toyota does that mean I have to? I want to drive a Porsche – they make me feel good, they look cooler and they are expensive so less people have them. Status – does mean something to some people but not so much in a pretentious way but in a – well I work hard and I want to have what I want – what I can afford. Is it a crime? During this time Apple looked to be over and chumps like Michael Dell were saying Apple should close up and return money to shareholders. I think Apple could buy like 10 Dells now – not machines but the company.
So here we are again with the age old debates of the digerati telling you, the consumer, what you should buy. I carried a Nexus for like 6 months. It was okay. Nothing amazing really but then again I am not a big Google guy and the Android phones only excel if you are married to Google. My activesync hooks would die about every 4 weeks and I would lose email and contacts since the configs does not sync to the cloud – only the data does. I don’t use gMail and a lot of the other services only seem really relevant to the US. Sure it was a smart phone and it killed my BB in every way but the battery life was deplorable and I honestly mostly used it a wi-fi hotspot. Which is a cool thing – I wish my iPhone did that.
I decided to get an iPhone 4, I have never had an iPhone, and I well – I can’t get enough of it. Better syncing, better battery, better camera and lots of wicked apps. Better app store and it syncs like a charm to iTunes. Yes – all of us know iTunes is the Trojan horse and I accepted that fate when I bought my first iPod 5gb – cause well it worked.
So now I am back to using my device to enhance my life more – rather than caring about openness, freedom and all the shit that honestly means very little to overall user experience. I reminds me back when I had to convince my friends that paying more for my Mac was worth every penny – yes Windoze was cheaper but overall it was more expensive cause it wasted too much of my precious time. I think the same with my iPhone. Maybe Android is more open, cheaper and so on – so? A Yamaha is cheaper than a BMW motorcycle – but ask me which one I would rather ride? A BMW. Any day of the week.
My point is – people buy what makes them feel good and what enhances their life. Android will appeal to some people but it won’t appeal to me. Is that such a big deal?
As usual DF sums it up well:
The differences between the iOS App Store and Android Market are a microcosm of the differences between Apple and Google. Apple is a retailer, a purveyor of well-crafted goods that people will line up to purchase. Google is an advertising company that builds popular services that command large audiences.
There’s a difference in culture — from the platform creators, from the developers writing software for the two platforms, and from what the users of these devices expect. For iOS, it’s about emotional appeal — art, design, the ineffable.
Peace.
