Somebody at least in Cambridge today was not caught up in pre-Christmas shopping.
Or perhaps he was…
If I had eight hours to chop down a tree,
I'd spend six sharpening my axe.
– Abraham Lincoln
It’s almost too easy to find inspiring TED talks, so I don’t often post them here now, but this one particularly attracted me.
Ernesto Sirolli manages to give some great advice on aid (which is also relevant in the developed world) and on high-tech entrepreneurship (which is also relevant in the developing world). To do both of these in such an amusing and impassioned way, in just 15 mins, is sheer brilliance.
(Very nicely filmed, too)
For some years, I had a handy sign-up form on the right-hand side of Status-Q allowing you to receive new entries by email, thanks to the good folk at FeedMyInbox. Sadly, they’re going to be closing down at the end of the year. As an alternative, you can use IFTTT to create RSS-to-email recipes.
However, since the most-used RSS reader out there, by far, is Google Reader, and the various apps that can sync with it (my current iPad favourite being Reeder), I’ve replaced the FeedMyInbox link with an ‘Add to Google’ button, so it’s dead easy to include Status-Q in your Google feeds, should you so desire.
Following on from the article mentioned yesterday, the World Service broadcast about the Trojan Room Coffee pot went out today.
Links to the programme, and a downloadable version here, if wanted.
There’s an amazing thing I’ve just discovered after installing an SSD in my laptop: Microsoft Office products now start up at a reasonable speed!
I’ve only just realised that, because I open them so rarely. (It’s one of the joys of working for myself that I can largely pick the tools I use.) In fact, I realise, I probably download updates for Office components more frequently than I actually use them.
That’s an interesting phenomenon; there ought to be a word for it. I’m probably unusual in having Microsoft Word work that way, but there are many of my lesser-used iOS apps that will be updated several times between successive actual executions of their code.
This is a real cultural shift from a world where big corporations would debate for months before rolling out an update to a program. On the web, we’ve grown used to the idea that a piece of software might not look quite the same the next time you log into it. But it’s now true of many apps in my pocket: something will have changed in an app before I run it again. I could quite easily pull my phone out one day and discover that last night’s update had broken something and I could no longer access the boarding pass I need for that plane…
I guess it’s a tribute to progress in software development, or perhaps to the Apple software-approval process (a real pain for developers but in many ways a boon to customers) that this so rarely happens.
Regular readers will know this story well by now, but there’s a piece on the BBC Technology site about the Trojan Room Coffee Pot, by Rebecca Kesby.
An audio interview with me, Paul Jardetzky and Martyn Johnson goes out on the BBC World Service tomorrow. Haven’t heard it yet…
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