Even Woz Thinks the Android Bests the iPhone – The Daily Beast.
Thought this might be of interest given my post last week on why I prefer Android over iOS.
Even Woz Thinks the Android Bests the iPhone – The Daily Beast.
Thought this might be of interest given my post last week on why I prefer Android over iOS.
Jason has a lot right in this article, primarily around the idea that Android tablets need to quit competing against each other and focus on competing against the iPad. Most of the current Android tablets are already more technically powerful than the iPad. I upgraded from my iPad to my Motorola Xoom and consider it to have been and continue to be a big upgrade. How can that be when the Xoom isn’t as powerful as the latest Android tablets and is probably barely on par with the iPad 2, particularly if actual weight comes into play?
GRCs | Password Haystacks: How Well Hidden is Your Needle? .
Nice tool to test out your current passwords for strength. Note how merely adding a repetitive character to a “weaker” password makes it exponentially stronger. For instance, “dumbp@swd” survives 1.02 days of Offline Fast Attack, but add a single “.” to the end of it and this increases to 1.98 months. Make it “dumbp@swd..” and now you’re talking about 9.75 years!
I’m going to be upgrading a few of my most important passwords taking this kind of thing into account. I already ensure that all my passwords for online sites are generated to be at least 10 characters mixed case, with at least one special character and one numeral. Running a couple test cases from my LastPass password generator indicates that these are safe from Offline Fast Attack for multiple years of cracking. I don’t have enough of anything to make that worth an attacker’s time <grin>.
Amazon Price Check promotion fuels Bay Area bookstore backlash – SiliconValley.com.
Anyone but me find the “shop locally” push an overly alarmist campaign? I’d like to propose that all shopping is local. I may buy any number of things online from enterprises that may or may not have local store presences, but I suspect that all those goods are delivered by someone with a job who is local. I suspect that person represents lots of other people local to me and local to others that have jobs. Don’t they count?
How many components or support mechanisms are there local to me that went into some portion of the creation, marketing, support, delivery, etc. of the product I bought from the evil, online enterprise? I paid with financial services that have a local presence and last time I was in my bank they paid their employees. Don’t these people count?
I guess I’m supposed to be sorry that the local mom-n-pop bookstore is going by the way-side (seriously, where are these mythical realms?), but am not going to shed any more tears over this than the loss of my local mom-n-pop hobby store or printing store or… name your own thing here. If you can’t compete, you don’t get to play for long. This is a rule of life and capitalism mirrors life most closely which is why it works better than other systems.
I love that one enterprising person decided to take on Amazon’s app approach with an app of their own. Great response if you want to compete, you have to compete, not beg for the pity and charity of your supposed customers. That may work once or near the holidays, but is not going to keep you in business even mid-term, let alone long term.
Don’t get me wrong, if you have a “local” store that you love and gives you fabulous overall value for your money, sweet. Keep going and spending your money. However, don’t be guilted into caving to corporate charity. You’re not doing the business a favor, merely slowly prolonging the inevitable. Better the business be confronted with reality sooner than later and make the necessary adjustments which may well include changing businesses. UPS and FedEx outlets are local too, remember.
Hillsdale College – Reagan: A Centenary Retrospective.
I can’t wait to watch these later in the week when time permits!
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/800-145/SP800-145.pdf
Yeah, it’s not all that stimulating, but gotta keep up with the lingo and various industry defined models.
Square’s App Refresh Makes Mobile Payments Hands-Free | Epicenter | Wired.com.
100 meters seems a pretty long distance, particularly in a mall where you could be in multiple fences simultaneously. Then there’s the security angle of who defines and secures access to the fences? I’d need to see this actually backed and supported by the credit card industry and get built into the processes and procedures there before I’m going to jump on this functionality. This is one mobile app I’ll pass on for now.

The Key to Creation by Kevin J. Anderson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Some interesting characters and interesting enough world, but as am writing this review after finishing all 3 books I have to give the whole series a 3.0 “meh” review.

The Map of All Things by Kevin J. Anderson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Some interesting characters and interesting enough world, but as am writing this review after finishing all 3 books I have to give the whole series a 3.0 “meh” review.

The Edge of the World by Kevin J. Anderson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Some interesting characters and interesting enough world, but as am writing this review after finishing all 3 books I have to give the whole series a 3.0 “meh” review.