Tuesday, October 2, 2012

LinkedIn First Million Member


This post is really for me, just documenting a cool email I received from Reid Hoffman, Co-found of LinkedIn, telling me that I was one of the first million LinkedIn members, 979 thousand something, so just barely. March 2011.

My user ID on Twitter is also 770 thousand something, so I'm a first million member there too.

Again this is really only something I care about. But I can show off to my wife and kids.


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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Amazon Prices J.K. Rowling's New Book Sky High


Checked out J.K. Rowling's new book The Casual Vacancy on Amazon today. Just wanted to see what the reader ratings were, and what the price would be. And to my surprise, the Amazon Kindle version at the time of this writing was $17.99. What the?

I guess you can no longer justify the cost of an e-reader as a way to buy cheaper books. Publishers have decided e-books are just as expensive as paper versions. Flawed thinking.

I know writers, published and self-published will tell me how wrong I am, but for years, media publishers have tried to justify the high cost of their goods based on cost to manufacture. This isn't the case for digital books, or digital music. But I guess music is the same, you buy a digital album for $10, about as much as you would in a store. It's just crazy.
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Monday, September 17, 2012

WordPress App For Android Sports Snazzy Stats


WordPress for Android (and iOS) has a pretty snazzy stats module. The UI is simpe but has great graphs. You must log into your Wordpress.com account, and it's possible you will also need JetPack. My stats suck so thanks for helping a brother out.
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I'm Refusing To Talk About The iPhone 5 Or Samsung Galaxy S III... Today


It's not going to happen. There is no way I'm going to link bait you here to talk about those two products, the iPhone 5 and the Samsung Galaxy S III. Wouldn't you rather discuss things like solving first, second and third world problems? My next post for sure.

 


Photo by zigazou76


 

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Tuesday, September 11, 2012

At The Mercy Of Cloud Storage


I'm a big cloud services user. I have cloud storage accounts with a net of nearly 100GB of free space. I use a lot of the space for archives, but lately I've been using Google Drive to keep my school documents available no matter I am. And today that system failed.

Early this morning, apparently before a major Google services outage, I had saved a document I needed to print for a class later in the evening. When I got the school, and opened up my browser with the intention of printing the document, I discovered I couldn't get to Google Drive. So no homework. It was frustrating. Class started in a few minutes and I would have to turn in a late assignment because of this failure, and the failure wasn't all Google.

Luckily I had the original still in a Word document, and I was able to print it out and failure averted. But what if I didn't have a second copy? So now, I need to back up my cloud storage in multiple places in case one is off line. That seems redundant and painful.

It's also a lesson in why local applications can be important. About a month ago I removed all the cloud storage apps I had on my main machine. Dropbox, Box, SkyDrive, Google Drive, and a few more. Each of these has a cached version of my file on the local hard drive. But my thought was why do I need a local copy. The whole reason for cloud storage is so I can get it off my local storage and free up space for things, like movies.

The dilemma then is are you willing to keep cached versions of files on your local system or totally trust that the files will be available 24-7.

You could write a recipe on If This Then That (IFTTT) that copies from one service to another. But that seems so backwards and broken.
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