Categories
Apple

Jim Dalrymple on Apple Music

A cute little monkey.The Loop“Over the weekend, I turned off Apple Music and it took large chunks of my purchased music with it. Sadly, many of the songs were added from CDs years ago that I no longer have access to. Looking at my old iTunes Match library, before Apple Music, I’m missing about 4,700 songs. At this point, I just don’t care anymore, I just want Apple Music off my devices.”

Ouch. It sounds like Apple Music has some really serious problems to sort out.

Will Apple ever get the “they can’t build web services” monkey off their backs?

Categories
Life

Exeter – Internet Stone Age

My wife and I recently purchased a home in Exeter, California. I spent most of my life here, she attended High School here, and we raised our daughters here. Exeter is a small farming community and a great place to raise a family.

We came back because we know it well and like it. The housing market in California has mellowed a bit since the crash of 2008 and now was a good time to purchase. We are thrilled to be back and we love our new home and neighborhood.

When we considered moving back to Exeter the thought of Internet connectivity never crossed my mind. We live here up until the end of 2010 and had a decent Verizon DSL connection. I figured we would get Verizon DSL or a cable provider when we moved back. Boy, was that a mistake.

After all was said and done we spent a few days painting inside our new home before moving in. One day during our painting fest our real estate agent dropped by with a housewarming gift and asked how things were going. We chatted for a while and as she was about to leave she asked “What are you doing for an Internet connection?” I was a bit taken aback. I said I’d call Verizon to see about getting DSL. That’s when she informed us she’s had new renters avoid Exeter because they couldn’t get a good high speed connection provider. Uh, what? Isn’t it 2015? I thought high speed connectivity was available in towns large and small? Again, I was mistaken.

It turns out Verizon has “filled all their DSL ports.” That’s right. The ONE well know provider of high speed connectivity couldn’t help us. I asked about expansion. They offered to put me on a waiting list. Yeah, good luck with that. I can imagine a few hundred names ahead of mine.

That was a real kick to the gut. I work from home a few days a week so I need something better than dial-up. Dial-up? Yeah, that’s what I was thinking. Heck, we don’t even have a phone line any longer. My thoughts turned to using a cellular hotspot. Not a bad idea but it would prove expensive. I started looking for alternatives. They exist but they’re costly when you look at what you get for the price.

In the end we settled on Dish Internet. I signed up for a 50GB data plan that provides 15Mbps download speeds for $79/month, with a lovely two year commitment (oh yeah, they really stick it to ya.) Not ideal, but workable. By comparison we had a 30Mbps Comcast connection for $39/month in Visalia (the city we just left.)

But wait, it gets worse.

After our installation was ready to roll I gave the connection the old speed test. We only get 2.5Mbps down and 1.2Mbps up. Uh, that’s not right. Needless to say Dish Network and I will be having a conversation next week about improving our service or dropping the price dramatically. 

It’s really hard to believe in 2015 we can’t get a decent connection in our little town. The lack of connectivity will turn off a lot of buyers and I’d imagine most renters in today’s market. If you need connectivity at home or for your business and can’t get it you’re probably going to move your business or buy a home elsewhere.

I cannot recommend using Dish Internet if you need it for more than getting email or casual web surfing. Cellular is faster in most cases.

My hope is Exeter will realize the potential economic impact on the community and push for better solutions. Until that day arrives, we live with what we have.

Categories
Apple Google

Is Safari the new IE?

Duct Tape, fixer of all things!Nolan Lawson: “It’s tempting to interpret this as a deliberate effort by Apple to sabotage any threats to their App Store business model, but a conspiracy seems unlikely, since that part of the business mostly breaks even. Another possibility is that they’re just responding to the demands of iOS developers, which largely amount to 1) more native APIs and 2) Swift, Swift, Swift. But since Apple is pretty good at keeping a lid on their internal process, it’s anyone’s guess.”

The web is ever changing and evolving as is the mobile development community. Here we have a web developer that’s dying to take advantage of new technologies but is stymied by Apple’s lack of support for a set of open standards. Do I think this is deliberate on Apple’s part? Well, yes and no, but I don’t think it’s malicious. I think it’s a matter of priorities.

Compare and contrast Apple and Google. Apple is about creating and selling hardware with the best user experience it can possibly provide. That means investing in the native experience. On the other hand we have Google who is all about the web and web technologies. They spend their time investing in the web. It makes complete sense for both companies to invest in the thing they believe in. It’s part of their DNA. They can’t help but do what’s right for their respective platforms.

It is interesting to note Google forked WebKit into Blink a couple years back. You gotta wonder if Google believed Apple was moving too slowly when it came to standards adoption. It seems a reasonable conclusion.

I’d love to hear from Don Melton on the subject. Don was the guy that started the Safari and WebKit projects at Apple. He would know better than anyone why Apple is doing what they’re doing. Having worked on some large projects in my past life I feel pretty confident in saying it’s a matter of company priorities. Pretty simple really. You have to put resources where it makes sense for your company.

Apple will come around. They have to. The web will eventually mature to the point that it can compete with native applications. When that happens the browser will have to become the new operating system.

Categories
Development Indie Life

For Love of Apps

A wonderful bouquet of flowers.
Brent Simmons“This is the age of writing iOS apps for love.”

This is what I’ve decided to do; write iOS or Mac apps for the love of it. If the app succeeds, great! If it fails, that’s ok too.

Categories
Life

The Insanity of San Francisco Real Estate

Curbed – San Francisco: ” Eventually, someone saw the potential for change in the modest two-bedroom home and bought it for $850,000. Flippers have completely transformed the house into a four-bedroom luxury abode listed for $5.25 million, asking more than six times the previous price and ushering it right into the Sextuple Club, a thing we just invented.”

Now that’s a flip.

Compare that to what $140k gets you in Detroit. With some time and a bit of money this Detroit home could look just as nice, if not nicer, than the San Francisco home.

Categories
Facebook

Open Source Hardware

Business Insider: “Hardware engineers across the industry are using OCP to ask each other questions. ‘It’s hard to get even two companies to work together. We’ve managed to get couple of hundred companies to work together and to let engineers be engineers.'”

You can read more about Open Compute here. It’s fascinating.

Categories
Games

Firewatch is coming!

Panic: “Have you heard of our upcoming game, Firewatch? (It’s a first-person mystery/drama/adventure set in the Wyoming wilderness. You’re Henry. You just got a job in a Firewatch tower. You make contact with another watcher who only exists on the other end of a handheld radio. And then… things happen.)”

I’m not much of a gamer, but this is a game I will purchase. It’s going to be really nice seeing it on a Mac running under Metal. The addition of the Playstation is quite exciting as well. Maybe those of us with an Xbox console will get a port later?

No matter. Firewatch looks like a keeper.

Categories
Indie Life

Yes, going Indie is difficult

A wonderful bouquet of flowers.Jared Sinclair: “You cannot become an indie developer. Ask for your day job back. Do not proceed to Step 5 or 6.”

I’ve been there. You can feel the frustration in every word. He wants so badly to be a full time Indie, but can’t quite stack the deck in his favor.

Last November I decided I had to bail on my dream of running an Indie shop in favor of a full time job. I had taken an approach I thought would work, I failed to execute it properly. My post mortem of my failure is bitter and filled with anger. I made every mistake a person could make. It’s a tough business, and many great developers (like Jared) will struggle to make it work. You have to be part marketing, part sales, and part developer to give it a chance of succeeding. Oh, and most importantly you need a big break.

Jared has what I would consider a very successful run as an Indie with his beautifully designed and developed Unread RSS reader (now at Supertop), but it wasn’t enough to sustain a living. There’s the rub. If you’re not connected in this market it’s really tough to make it work. The Indies that have succeeded have either been around a very long time, hit the app store early with something unique, or have influential friends that give them an instant leg up.

When I decided I had to get a full time job it became obvious I was going to have to do the development I really want to do on the side, as a hobby. That means I’ll get to dabble a little bit, but never really get the chance to build the piece of software I want to build. That’s ok. I’ll tinker, RxCalc looks long in the tooth and Arrgly could use some love. I have ideas for both, and a bunch of code I’ve been sitting on for quite a while that needs to see the light of day. It feels like the right way to be an Indie today.

Given that I’d tweak Jared’s list a little.

  1. Do you have a day job that pays you a full-time salary? If yes, proceed to Step 2. If not, skip to Step 3.
  2. Good. Keep it, you’ll need the income.
  3. Find a full time job you will enjoy.
  4. Find a passion project. Something you’d love to do on nights and weekends.
  5. Open Xcode
  6. You are now an Indie Developer

I know a lot of folks don’t have much time on nights and weekends. My first iOS App was built an hour here an hour there until it was good enough to put in the store. It’s worth the effort and feels great when you can finally push out your code, even if it is a silly little application.

Hang in there Jared. I understand your desire, I really do. It’s what I want too.

Categories
Apple

Phil Schiller on The Talk Show

The Talk Show: “Recorded in front of a live audience at Mezzanine in San Francisco, John Gruber is joined by Phil Schiller to discuss the news from WWDC: OS X 10.11 El Capitan, iOS 9, the new native app SDK for Apple Watch, Apple Music, and the 2004 American League Championship series.”

This is the bright side of the new Apple. They’re still secretive (which is good) but they’re opening up in many ways.

Categories
Uncategorized

No

The New York Times: “Outside watchers of the company have looked at Anthony Noto, a former technology banker at Goldman Sachs and Twitter’s current chief financial officer, as another potential candidate for chief executive.”

The idea of an ex-Wall Street banker at the helm of the Internet’s best communication tool feels completely wrong.