Author: fish1964

  • Leaning Droid

    The phone upgrade saga continues. This week I made one actual decision. I’m sticking with Verizon.

    I had my revelation during an Origami Risk team conference call. The kids were out so I was actually working at home. I started the call on my land line. But we were getting an echo from my phone. I’m pretty sure the echo was due to my headset and phone not playing well together, but to move the call forward I switched to my cell phone. And I didn’t think twice about doing it. I never think twice about using my cell phone. At a coffee shop I sometime worry about background noise, but I never worry about signal.

    I know many people with iPhones, my wife being one of them. They totally love their phones. But they always talk about dropped calls. And I have plenty of experience with this, talking to them and suddenly hearing silence. It dawned on me, with my current cell phone I’ve never had a call drop. It never happens.

    I have no office. My cell phone is my office phone. I need to be mobile. And I need to be able to count on my phone. At the end of the day, network coverage is my #1 priority. Sorry AT&T, I’m not switching.

    So that leaves me with a few choices:

    1. Motorola Droid
    2. HTC Eris
    3. Wait

    Option 3 is somewhat compelling. There are plenty of rumors that Verizon will have the iPhone sometime in 2010. And Google is supposedly building their own Android phone.

    I’ve been comparing the Droid and the Eris. The Eris is a nice looking phone. It’s sleeker than the Droid. HTC put a nice face on top of Android. But ultimately it’s an inferior processor and I want my phone to rock.

    So I’m leaning Droid. I’ve checked out the apps and while they don’t compare to the iPhone, the important ones for me are there and there are enough interesting ones for my kids.

    But there’s plenty of time to change my mind…

  • E-Readers

    I’d be interested to know who is using the Kindle or any other e-readers. I’ve been reading e-books for years, but only on my phone. My e-book habits go back to the old Treo.

    Yes the screen is small if you are reading on your phone, but you are surfing the web on your phone these days, right? Is there a significant difference? You always carry your phone. If your phone has free e-reader software, then you can always be carrying a book.

    So why would you pay $200+ for a big bulky e-reader?

    I really don’t get it. I can be stuck anywhere. In line, on the subway, doesn’t matter, I always have a book to read because I always have my phone. There’s no way I’d carry the Kindle around all the time. A paperback is smaller.

    All the ads say something like, “carry hundreds of books…”. I don’t need hundreds, I need exactly one. Maybe two if I’m in the middle of a difficult scientific book and I’d like something fluffy from time to time. Hundreds is not useful. This isn’t speed chess, you can’t start twenty books at the same time.

    Is it really that hard for normal people (yes, I understand I’m not normal) to read on your phone, assuming you have some type of smartphone? You just spent $200 on that, read some books while you’re at it…

  • Parole and Police killings

    I’m generally one to understand the complexities of the decision to allow parole. It shouldn’t be used for cheap political shots. So I would be in favor of reserving judgment on Mike Huckabee’s decision to allow out on parole the guy (serving 108 years for five felonies) who recently killed four police officers.

    But this article makes an interesting point:

    Huckabee says this “horrible and tragic event” should not be politicized. But it is his party that has honed such attacks into a dark art. This is a prison of their making, and they wasted little time getting back to it, even now that the offender is one of their own . Michelle Malkin’s Web site Monday showed a picture of Clemmons, with a tag line: “Huckabee’s Willie Horton II.”

    Back in 1988, when it came to light that Willie Horton committed fresh crimes while out on a weekend furlough program backed by then-Gov. Mike Dukakis of Massachusetts, Republicans used it to help destroy Dukakis the presidential candidate. It may even have cost him the election.

    “The only question is whether we depict Willie Horton with a knife in his hand or without it,” said a gleeful Roger Ailes, then a media consultant to Republicans.

    Ailes now runs Fox News. If they decide to hold the politician accountable for early release of a violent felon linked now to a death of four police officers, they know where to find him – in studio, as a Fox News host.

    On this topic Bill O’Reilly called Huckabee a “stand-up guy”. Sure, you work for the same (fair and balanced) network…

  • Twitter followers

    The way some Twitter accounts follow you immediately following a single tweet continues to amuse me.

    We just cranked up the Origami Risk Twitter account. We don’t have real followers yet, but Twitter references help with the search engines and our momentum is building.

    We also just revamped our web site, particularly the product section. We have added so many new features, plus video help, that we needed a major update (as a quick aside, with no bureaucracy to worry about, the site revamp took exactly one day).

    So the new web site was an obvious tweet topic. I believe tweets should try to be amusing, so the tweet was:

    Origami Risk unveils updated web site. More articles, video and celebrity gossip (OK, 2 out of 3).

    Immediately, Origami Risk gains followers in the celebrity gossip world. Hilarious. They’ll be a bit disappointed if my next tweet is:

    The real cause of Tiger’s accident: Reading loss triangle while driving.

  • Origami Risk in Business Insurance

    Dave Tweety may just be trying to drum up RMIS vendor selection business, but it’s our first mention in the press. It’s not a particularly good article but it does have an amusing disagreement on what cloud computing is. My take is in my previous post…

  • Cloud Computing

    There’s been a bunch of discussion in the tech world about cloud computing and the new marketing term “private cloud”. I find the term amusing since it’s somewhat of an oxymoron, but the term is taking hold, particularly among people who don’t really understand what cloud computing is.

    The best explanation I’ve read came from Amazon’s CTO, Werner Vogels. His blog is interesting, if a bit too data center centric for my tastes. In his words:

    Private Cloud is not the Cloud

    I often get asked to define "The Cloud," especially because of the many permutations that different vendors use in trying to make their existing businesses look like a cloud offering. I define the cloud by it benefits, as those are very clear. What are called private clouds have little of these benefits and as such, I don’t think of them as true clouds.

    The cloud:

    • Eliminates Cost. The cloud changes capital expense to variable expense and lowers operating costs. The utility-based pricing model of the cloud combined with its on-demand access to resources eliminates the needs for capital investments in IT Infrastructure. And because resources can be released when no longer needed, effective utilization rises dramatically and our customers see a significant reduction in operational costs.
    • Is Elastic. The ready access to vast cloud resources eliminates the need for complex procurement cycles, improving the time-to-market for its users. Many organizations have deployment cycles that are counted in weeks or months, while cloud resources such as Amazon EC2 only take minutes to deploy. The scalability of the cloud no longer forces designers and architects to think in resource-constrained ways and they can now pursue opportunities without having to worry how to grow their infrastructure if their product becomes successful.
    • Removes Undifferentiated "Heavy Lifting."The cloud let its users focus on delivering differentiating business value instead of wasting valuable resources on the undifferentiated heavy lifting that makes up most of IT infrastructure. Over time Amazon has invested over $2B in developing technologies that could deliver security, reliability and performance at tremendous scale and at low cost. Our teams have created a culture of operational excellence that power some of the world’s largest distributed systems. All of this expertise is instantly available to customers through the AWS services.
  • Happy Thanksgiving

    The “what I’m thankful” blog is a bit overdone (If you read this blog, you saw the pictures from Victoria’s birthday and you know I’m thankful for family most of all). But I did have an interesting thought.

    I let the rest of OrigamiRisk know that I’d be out Thursday and Friday at my wife’s sister’s place for Thanksgiving. Usually Thanksgiving comes at a good time. It’s been a long year, work is crazy, and four days away from work sounds great.

    This year, I’m looking forward to Thanksgiving a lot. But not to get four days away from work. We haven’t seen Elly’s sister’s family in a while and they are probably our closest family (proximity and emotionally) so I’m mainly looking forward to that. I’m sure I’ll work around the edges. Not because I have to, just because I like it.

    I’ve probably worked more hours this year than in a long time, but I don’t feel particularly burnt out. I’m in the middle of adding a feature to allow the ability to schedule the refresh of our already cool dashboard, and I’d really like to get it done before Monday. There’s no particular deadline, just the feeling of accomplishment.

    I guess that’s another thing I’m thankful for.

  • Victoria is Three

    Tori turned three years old on November 20th. Hard to believe. We’ve been a bit low budget this year, so her birthday party was at our place. But we needed something entertaining so we hired a magician to come in for an hour, Otsie Kerplotsie. We asked him to do the “silly magician” shtick instead of the clown bit (too many kids are afraid of clowns).

    I was a bit nervous about how it would go. We have a good friend who always does the clown/magician thing for parties and they’ve been hit or miss. One year she hired a clown that was supposed to show up as Dora. We have forever referred to that clown as “crack Dora” because she was clearly on something that day.

    Otsie came recommended by another magician (who was already booked). That’s generally a good sign, so I booked him.

    He showed up a bit early and started by doing some small intimate tricks for the kids who were there.

    DSC02489

    (left to right, Victoria (mine), Kenzie, Mia, Danielle (mine), Jesse, Otsie).

    He had Tori laughing from the beginning. The act wasn’t particularly original, he was just really funny. He did the bit where he stuffs the handkerchiefs into a bag but they fall out the bottom:

     ToriHanky

    The ever popular collapsing magic wand bit:

    ToriWand

    And in general had the whole gang laughing, especially Tori.

    GangWatching

    And he finished with some very impressive balloon animals/things. An overall excellent performance.

    Top that off with some cake…

    ToriCake

    And a walk in your big sister’s shoes…

    ToriInDansShoes

    And you have an excellent birthday party.

    Happy Thanksgiving to all. I’m obviously most thankful for family and friends…

  • No Amnesty. No, Amnesty…

    Politics is fascinating. Lou Dobbs made a living bashing illegal immigrants on CNN. He apparently was just kidding. Now that he’s considering a run for political office he’s apparently realized that there are a lot of Latino voters…

  • Waving

    I’m on the preview of Google Wave. It looks interesting. Seems like a combination of a Wiki and email in real time. I can see it being useful for work collaboration. We’ll see.

    fish1964@googlewave.com