Category Technology

Monbiot on peak oil and food production

Mon­biot on peak oil and food pro­duc­tion:

If the whis­tleblowers are right, we should be stock­pil­ing … If we are taken by sur­prise, if we have failed to replace oil before the sup­ply peaks then crashes, the global eco­nomy is stuffed. But noth­ing the whistle-blowers said has scared me as much as the con­ver­sa­tion I had last week with a Pem­broke­shire farmer.

Wyn Evans, who runs a mixed farm of 170 acres, has been try­ing to reduce his depend­ency on fossil fuels since 1977. He has installed an anaer­obic digester, a wind tur­bine, solar pan­els and a ground-sourced heat pump. He has sought wherever pos­sible to replace diesel with his own elec­tri­city. Instead of using his tractor to spread slurry, he pumps it from the digester on to nearby fields. He’s replaced his tractor-driven irrig­a­tion sys­tem with an elec­tric one, and set up a new sys­tem for dry­ing hay indoors, which means he has to turn it in the field only once. Whatever else he does is likely to pro­duce smal­ler sav­ings. But these innov­a­tions have reduced his use of diesel by only around 25%.

We prac­tic­ally eat oil.

EyeTV for the iPhone

Elgato is a favour­ite com­pany of mine. They pro­duce USB TV tuners and the excel­lent EyeTV soft­ware for watch­ing and record­ing TV on a Mac. Today they released EyeTV for the iPhone, which let’s you watch live TV or record­ings on your iPhone via your Mac. As expec­ted the exper­i­ence is flaw­less. Now I can watch TV in bed on that odd occa­sion without bring­ing a full blown TV into the bedroom.

Update: I just real­ised you can watch TV any­where you have access to a Wifi con­nec­tion. Nice touch.

The definitive Snow Leopard review

John Siracusa’s in depth review of Snow Leo­pard, Apple’s latest upgrade to the Mac OS X oper­at­ing sys­tem. Always worth the read.

Idiots at Apple out of control: censor English dictionary

Ninjawords dictionary iPhone app

Ninja­words dic­tion­ary iPhone app

When I pur­chased an iPhone it was with the cas­ual under­stand­ing that I was buy­ing into a product that was con­trolled not by me, in the way I con­trol my com­puter, but by the com­pany selling me the product, Apple.

It’s what Jonathan Zit­train describes as a “tethered appli­ance.” In con­trast to a “gen­er­at­ive PC.” Have enough of these tethered appli­ances and the inter­net would cease being the internet.

The latest neg­at­ive example of this teth­er­ing is the most out­rageous App Store rejec­tion to date: the cen­sor­ship and adult-rating of the Eng­lish dic­tion­ary!

Update: If you’d like a chance to tell these self-appointed arbit­ers of cul­ture what you think you can go to the Ninja­words App Store page (App Store link) and click on the “Report a Prob­lem” but­ton at the bot­tom. You’ll need to use an iPhone as the “Report a Prob­lem” but­ton doesn’t seem to appear in iTunes.

Update 2: Apple’s vice pres­id­ent Phil Schiller responds to Gruber.

Remind me never to buy a Kindle

Amazon has remotely wiped a book that people had already pur­chased for the Kindle (an ebook reader).

As John Gruber notes:

It’s one thing to stop selling them. It’s some­thing else entirely to remove them from the Kindles of those who already bought them. That this happened with1984, of all the books that have ever been writ­ten, is simply incredible.

(Point of com­par­ison: when apps get yanked from the App Store, they don’t get deleted from the iPhones of people who already bought them.)

I don’t care what reason Amazon has for this. If the book shouldn’t have been sold they should have stopped it in the first place.

This is a very dif­fer­ent world to that of the free and open inter­net; this is the world of “inter­net appli­ances,” where the com­pan­ies that sell these products have remote con­trol over them. I feel cagey enough about own­ing an iPhone, which is also an inter­net appli­ance, but there’s no way I’m going near the Kindle after this episode.

Abel & Cole upgrade

Abel & Cole have upgraded their web­site and added new lines of products. Great web­site. Great com­pany. Highly recommended.

Why so many things are badly designed

Jason Snell of Mac­world on why Apple excels at product design:

Apple excels at cre­at­ing products that the gen­eral pub­lic likes because the com­pany is driven by design, not by engin­eer­ing. Most tech products — heck, most products in gen­eral — aren’t as good as they can be because they’re put together by the people with the tech­nical know­ledge required to build them. And so the tech­nical aspects of the product get pushed to the forefront.

Apple’s the kind of com­pany that makes decisions based on people, on users, and then chal­lenges its engin­eers to find ways to ful­fill those needs.

The next iPhone

John Gruber, with prob­ably the most reli­able low-down on the next iPhone, due to arrive in July.

And, in the mean time, work­ers appeal to Apple dir­ectly to end iPhone supplier’s labour abuse.

The main problem with Wolfram Alpha

John Timmer’s take on Wolfram Alpha:

… the biggest issue is that, in the pro­cess of cre­at­ing the data store behind Alpha, all the con­text behind a num­ber — who pro­duced it, what were their meth­ods, how was the raw data obtained, is the num­ber actu­ally rel­ev­ant for a given ana­lysis, etc. — is stripped …

Wolfram Alpha, a new way to find facts

Wolfram Alpha is a new search engine you’re likely to hear a lot more about and it went live with a test run today. It’s not a search engine in the same way as Google, which indexes and searches web­sites, but an answer search engine, which indexes and com­putes facts.

Wolfram Alpha about page:

Wolfram|Alpha is the first step in an ambi­tious, long-term pro­ject to make all sys­tem­atic know­ledge imme­di­ately com­put­able by any­one.  You enter your ques­tion or cal­cu­la­tion, and Wolfram|Alpha uses its built-in algorithms and grow­ing col­lec­tion of data to com­pute the answer.  Based on a new kind of knowledge-based computing.

Theodore Gray of Wolfram Research describes the secret behind Wolfram Alpha:

The secret weapon that has allowed us, and no one else, to assemble such a vast lib­rary of algorithms, in such a diverse range of fields, is Math­em­at­ica.

Math­em­at­ica is famil­iar to sci­ent­ists and engin­eers as the most power­ful, most gen­eral tool for sci­entific com­pu­ta­tion, a role it has played since Ver­sion 1 was released in 1988.