Category: Technology

  • Amazon’s Operating System

    This is a very interesting article about operating systems and the lock-in benefits they can create. It argues that Alexa (Amazon Echo) is becoming Amazon’s operating system.

    In short, Amazon is building the operating system of the home — its name is Alexa — and it has all of the qualities of an operating system you might expect:

    • All kinds of hardware manufacturers are lining up to build Alexa-enabled devices, and will inevitably compete with each other to improve quality and lower prices.
    • Even more devices and appliances are plugging into Alexa’s easy-to-use and flexible framework, creating the conditions for a moat: appliances are a lot more expensive than software, and lot longer lasting, which means everyone who buys something that works with Alexa is much less likely to switch

    We were very early adopters of the Echo, pre-ordering it when only Prime members could get it, so we’ve had it for three years. It’s mostly just for music, but it has become a natural part of the house.

  • The Calm Company

    I’ve read every book produced by Basecamp (all three of them), so I’m looking forward to their next book, The Calm Company.

    If it’s constantly crazy at work, we have two words for you: Fuck that. And two more: Enough already.

    Chaos should not be the natural state at work. Anxiety isn’t a prerequisite for progress. Sitting in meetings all day isn’t required for success. These are all perversions of work — side effects of broken models and follow-the-lemming-off-the-cliff worst practices. Step aside and let the suckers jump.

    Calm is profitability.
    Calm is protecting people’s time and attention.
    Calm is reasonable expectations.
    Calm is about 40 hours of work a week.
    Calm is ample time off.
    Calm is smaller.
    Calm is a visible horizon.
    Calm is meetings as a last resort.
    Calm is contextual communication.
    Calm is asynchronous first, real-time second.
    Calm is more independence, less interdependence.
    Calm is about sustainable practices that can run for the long-term.

  • Holy Smokes Man

    National Geographic got access to Elon Musk and SpaceX leading up to the first time they actually landed the booster. This video, showing the reactions from the SpaceX folks, is amazing.

    I love Elon Musk running outside to stand in a desolate Florida road to watch the booster try to land and his reaction when it does. I’m thinking I would have used a different word starting with S…

  • Woz was my Teacher

    Not mine unfortunately. Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple, apparently taught an after school computer class to 5th graders in 1995. Via Motherboard

    Then he pulled a floppy disk out of his pocket and proceeded to take it apart to show us what each piece did. In the back of the room were 30 brand new Apple Macintosh PowerBooks (1400c) on loan to us. He said that those who mastered the concepts would get to keep theirs at the end of the year.

    Must have been a really cool class…

  • Guard Your Big Rocks

    Software developers know this to be true, uninterrupted time is gold. Jason Fried, founder of Basecamp among other things, wrote this article, “What’s an hour?”. Read it to understand this post’s title.

    Do you have 60 minutes? Or do you have 15 minutes, 10 minutes, 25 minutes, 5 minutes, and 5 minutes?

    I recently spoke to 600+ people at the Lean Startup conference. I asked “Who here can remember having 4 continuous hours to themselves at work any time in the last 5 years?” Maybe 20 or 30 people raised their hand. Out of 600+. That’s tragic.

    He did this related TED talk several years ago…

  • The Dividends of Funding Basic Science

    I don’t often agree with the Op/Ed page of the Wall Street Journal, but they don’t often have pieces by the President of MIT.

    Scientists are like entrepreneurs: They have an eye for spotting unrealized opportunities. It can be hard to predict where those leads will take them. But as we have seen over decades, basic science leads to the new knowledge that leads all of us to the future, along the way spinning off powerful new tools and educating a new generation of scientific pioneers.

  • SpaceX’s NSFW Rocket

    Tim Urban at Wait But Why did what he does best, a long blog post about SpaceX’s plan to go to Mars.

    A couple months ago, when SpaceX first announced that this would be happening in late September, it hit me that I might still have special privileges with them, kind of grandfathered in from my time working with Elon and his companies in 2015 (which resulted in an in-depth four-part blog series). So I reached out and asked if I could learn about the big fucking rocket ahead of time and write a post about it.

    They said yes. Baboom.

    He calls the rocket the Big Fucking Rocket, which is amusing, but I like even more that Musk might call the first one the Heart of Gold (Google it and skip the Neil Young references).

    Anyway, read the post

  • Go to Mars

    Today, Elon Musk presented a more detailed version of his plan for SpaceX to help colonize Mars.

    This is not news. Elon Musk’s grand plan has always been to get humanity onto a second planet to help insure we don’t blow ourselves up. I wrote about this a year ago.

    This is why technology folks think Elon Musk is the coolest guy out there. He isn’t just proposing a crazy plan to go to Mars. He will explain in detail which propulsion system is best and why reusability is key. He landed a rocket on a robot ship (multiple times). And he’s putting his money where his mouth is and literally dedicating his Tesla profits to the Mars mission. It’s crazy super cool and even as an old guy, there’s a decent shot I’ll see someone on Mars and a better shot my daughters will see a city on Mars.

    Crazy stuff made real.

    If you want to watch the full version (and I would argue you do), click the bottom link. But The Verge tried to condense the hour long talk into five minutes.

    Full talk: