Archive for category Stuff I Dig
Why I’m excited about the Apple iPad …and why I bought a Kindle DX
Posted by RickMacMerc in Geek Courage, Geek Faith, Geek Hope, Geek Lust, Geek Pride, Stuff I Dig on January 31, 2010
Lately, I have become a bit of a voracious reader; keeping a stack of almost thirty books on the go at a time. I’m not bragging. I actually think I may have a bit of a problem. But that’s fodder for another post.
Anyway.
I’ve been dying for a book reading device that would make my books easier to bring with me and access on the go. I love to read at my local Starbucks but don’t like to stick to just one book and bringing a stack around with me makes the baristas compelled to tell me that I’m not permitted to stay quite that long. “We do close, you know!”
So a book reader was in order, but with all the buzz about the upcoming Apple tablet announcement, I thought it prudent to wait until January 27th to make my decision. That evening, after reading the announcement coverage, I ordered an Amazon Kindle DX, it arrived less than 2 days later and I couldn’t be happier with it.
Unlike the Apple iPad, it is not backlit or glossy which is a huge plus for book reading in my opinion. I look at a backlit LCD all day at work and my eyes get strained. I need a light to read by, but I don’t need it to be emanating from the device. The Kindle also offers wireless access via Amazon’s global Whispernet as part of the purchase of the device—not something else I have to add to my already bloated cellular bill. That alone is magic. And the Kindle, being an Amazon product, has access to a wide selection of titles to read.1
You might assume from this that I’m not a big fan of the Apple iPad. Well, you’re right. At the moment, I’m not.
But, in the case of the iPad, the “one more thing…” that was once a giddily anticipated staple of Steve Jobs’ keynote addresses is a powerful one. The one more thing here is the same thing that made the iPhone so compelling. It’s not the touch screen, the accelerometer, the wifi or 3G access…it’s all of those things plus one very powerful component whose impact cannot be underestimated…
…developers.
We have only seen the iPad with a handful of desktop-style apps…ones that we already have on our iPhones and iPod touches…expanded and made somewhat more glorious on the bigger screen. And, in spite of how Mr. Jobs said it as if we were about to have our eyes opened to a new world, we already know what it’s like to have the internet in our hands.2 But what we haven’t seen is what the iPad can do in the hands of the enormous and shockingly talented community of developers Apple has attracted.
I saw the announcement on January 27th hoping to see something that would solve the logistical problems of my reading addiction and was disappointed. That is not to say that I won’t be getting an Apple iPad. I fear that may by unavoidable. I might be compelled to, not by Steve Jobs’ Reality Distortion Field, but by the possibilities for this device as seen through the talented and innovative minds of what will no doubt be a formidable Apple iPad developer army.
You ain’t seen nothin’ yet.
- the only problem here is that 40% of my reading is rather obscure—the very “long tail” that has made Amazon so successful—and many of those titles are not yet available for the Kindle…still, there’s lots to choose from [↩]
- Heck, with the iPhone, I know what it’s like to have the internet in my pants! [↩]
Do It Yourself Post-Its
Posted by RickMacMerc in Stuff I Dig on September 20, 2009
Due to my Post-It addiction, I try to keep one if these handy at all times. The glue is non-permenant and just tacky enough to hold a note to something. It’s a Do It Yourself Post-It stick1.
- interesting to note that Scotch makes this glue stick but 3M makes Post-Its…maybe it’s not that interesting since they’re all the same company [↩]
Poisoned popcorn and following strangers
Posted by RickMacMerc in Geek Charity, Geek Courage, Geek Faith, Geek Hope, Stuff I Dig on November 19, 2008
2008 has been an amazing year for me.
2007 was pretty good too; that year I started appearing on TV as a regular guest on The Lab with Leo Laporte on G4 TechTV Canada and the How Network in Australia. This was huge for me. I had no business being on TV, but I have a passion for helping people with technology and a need to encourage people creatively to embrace the freedom it can afford. This allowed me to get past my fears and actually do pretty well on camera.
In 2008, the Lab was cancelled and I lost that outlet. But, through the wonderful friendships I’d made while guesting on the show, I was encouraged to go it on my own and create a video podcast component for MacMerc.com…MacMerc.TV. The show is about ready to launch and I attribute much of the success I’ve had in even creating it and achieving it as a goal to two things: poisoned popcorn and following strangers on Twitter.
To explain this, we’ll go back to 2007 again. It was Remembrance Day weekend up here in Canada (November 11th) and my good friend Maria and I were going to head down to “The States” for a bit of shopping. Unknown to me at the time, the melted butter I had sprinkled liberally on my popcorn the night before had gone bad just enough that it made me violently ill, but not so much that it tasted in any way “funny”…so I polished off a whole bowl.
The next morning, yes, violently ill. There’s no need to give you details but, suffice it to say my abs got a workout that morning. I moaned and groaned and slept through most of the day.
Later that night, after the storm had passed, I checked Twitter for some happy news and found that someone I didn’t know (a follower of a follower of someone I did know) had invited the world to watch him as he tried to compose music in his studio. This stranger was Geoff Smith and that night turned out to be the very first of his many and awesome UStream concerts.
Note: if you happen to follow me on Twitter, first off, thank you and, secondly, if I every go off on a “come check out @geoffsmith ‘s UStream concert” jag, understand that I do it because I honestly, deeply believe the experience is so worthwhile that you need to come take part.
He’s got a Christmas show coming up on December 15th, by the way…
From being in that first concert, I have “met” so many cool people and, through them, so many more. Each contact has been an encouragement to me at some time over the last year; the names Cali Lewis and Neal Campbell spring to mind, but their friends quickly became my friends too. Awesomeness.
So, the lesson?
Poison Popcorn: every so often an unexpected turn of events can be an chance to find other opportunities. Find value in failure.
Follow strangers: often breaking out of your established group yields a new group with its own benefits and strengths. If you’re on Twitter, look and see who the people you follow follow…watch to whom the people you follow send @replies… they see something in these people—find out what! It could be very valuable to you.

