Interactioned: 700,000 Daily Activations Isn't Good News
A lot of the press have been trumpeting Andy Rubin’s tweet that as of a few days ago over 700,000 Android devices were being activated daily. One ridiculous report over at AllThingsD even floated the notion that we could see 2.5 million activations by the end of next year. But as far as I can…
In short, the Galaxy Nexus seems more like a phone that its makers can brag about making rather than a device that its users would brag about owning. It has all sorts of features that seem great on posters and billboards and board meeting reports, but none of those features enhance the actual user experience.
Definition of an ‘Apple fanboy’ and those that use the term
Apple fanboy: Someone who is tired of technology being difficult and knows there is something better; someone that loves to get the job done instead of working on their machine; a person that isn’t afraid of breaking the status quo; someone that appreciates quality design and workmanship; a person that realizes cheapest isn’t always best. Apple fanboys are commonly confused with the sensible people of society. A person that calls you a fanboy: A person that can’t handle the fact that Apple, not Microsoft or Google, is the company that is bringing all of the above to the world. These people often hack their devices to make them look like Apple’s devices.
the understatement: Android Orphans: Visualizing a Sad History of Support
The announcement that Nexus One users won’t be getting upgraded to Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich led some to justifiably question Google’s support of their devices. I look at it a little differently: Nexus One owners are lucky. I’ve been researching the history of OS updates on Android phones…
Scripting language comparisons
An extensive side-by-side reference sheet of four scripting languages (PHP, Python, Perl, and Ruby) with which you can compare how the different languages handle variable declarations, concatenations, objects, and hundreds of other things. Great cheatsheet for learning a new language when you’re already familar with one of the others.
Via kottke.org
How to dice a Onion?
Apple is the number 1 manufacturer according to Nielsen
What’s amazing to me is that Apple has accomplished 28% iOS smart phone market share with only one single new product each year. They haven’t needed a dozen or more devices on the market at any given time to garner such a large footprint in the market place. They have only needed one called the iPhone.
AppStore: ChatBot === EVE (WALL-E)

ChatBot’s icon is almost exact replica of the Disney/Pixar movie character “EVE” from the movie “WALL-E”
10 Ways Not To Resign From A Job
- Don’t resign unless you have a firm, written job offer you’ve accepted. This was the first thing my Dad taught me about the workaday world, and it’s been one of the most important. Why? All your friends at cool start-ups, that gal you met at a conference, your boss from three jobs ago: one (or all) of them has said to you, “I’d hire you in a second. Call me.” Problem is if you quit and then make that call, the magic dies. They won’t hire you. The stars don’t align that way. Put your plan in place first, then resign.
- Don’t resign in anger. This is soooo tempting. Here, as in much else in life, anger is the enemy, not the energy. You may hate your job and think your boss is a horse’s fanny, but don’t let your anger show until – back to # 1 – your plan is in place. Never, ever say what you think about that jackass boss, either. Tomorrow is today, with mistakes.
- Don’t resign without a financial safety net. If you’ve ignored #s 1 and 2, this one’s for you. The rule of thumb used to be three months of expenses but these days plan on socking away enough cash to take you through up to nine months’ unemployment. And don’t count unemployment benefits – who knows what Congress will do with those?
- Don’t resign to find yourself, unless you’ve observed #3. Odds are you’re not lost, but are bored, angry, depressed or underemployed.
- Don’t resign to start a new company until… a) you have vetted your idea with folks with deep pockets (Mom and Dad usually don’t count here) and industry expertise (or) b) you have doubled down on #3. No dipping into IRAs to pay salaries and expenses, either.
- Don’t clean out the shared drive at work and then resign. Not ever. This is called theft, and it’s punishable in a court of law. And don’t think, because you changed a word here or there, that a company’s IP has suddenly become yours. Ethics. Say it three times the next time you think about shooting a file home on Gmail.
- Don’t resign because you had a bad review. Bad reviews are second chances. They give you time to come to terms with your shortcomings on the job and improve, and if you can’t manage that, if the damage is too great, they give you time to plan a graceful and positive exit.
- Don’t resign because you’re bored. See #s 3 and 4. There is nothing more boring than waiting for the right day to call the unemployment hotline. If you’re so smart your current job bores you, well, there’s an opportunity. ‘Nuff said.
- It should not require saying, but here goes: do not resign to follow your true love to his or her next step on the job ladder, unless you have seen to #s 3, 4 and 8. Take care of yourself. No one else has that as priority #1 on their to-do list, be sure of it.
- Don’t resign unless you really mean it. Have a plan, have money in the bank. Have an offer in your pocket. Have the support of family, friends, your job network. This is the only way you will be able to go to your next job with an open mind and a willing heart.

