Benlog

security, privacy, transparency.

Archive for April, 2010

the genius of Steve Jobs: he makes you want the lock-in

Posted: Thursday, April 29th, 2010 @ 12:52 pm in autonomy | 7 Comments »

Steve Jobs is a genius for many reasons, but one reason that may be under-appreciated is his unparalleled ability to convince users that he’s locking them into his platforms for their own good. Consider Jobs’s latest letter explaining why he won’t accept Flash on the iPhone/iPad. Most of the letter is right on: Adobe’s Flash [...]

distributed innovation

Posted: Wednesday, April 21st, 2010 @ 4:58 pm in data, web | 3 Comments »

A few years ago, a small group of folks (Mark Birbeck, Steven Pemberton, Ralph Swick, Shane McCarron, me, and more recently Ivan Herman, Manu Sporny, and a lot of great new folks) started with the simple idea that, if web pages contained a bit of structured data in addition to their haphazard content, we could [...]

What Nick Carr doesn’t get: hobbyists are the canary in the coal mine

Posted: Wednesday, April 7th, 2010 @ 10:31 pm in autonomy | 4 Comments »

I told myself I wouldn’t write about the iPad anymore, but I have to. Nick Carr has joined the John Gruber club, by calling us Luddites: What these folks are ranting against, or at least gnashing their teeth over, is progress – or, more precisely, progress that goes down a path they don’t approve of. [...]

Myth: the app store will protect you and prevent user confusion

Posted: Monday, April 5th, 2010 @ 5:23 pm in autonomy, security | No Comments »

An interesting thing happened with the Apple AppStore this weekend: This weekend, as hundreds of thousands of people explored their iPads [...] they found [...] an application called Facebook Ultimate, featuring a sleek version of the familiar ‘f’ logo. The application quickly rose through the ranks to become one of the App Store’s top selling [...]

“It’s a tradeoff” and other uni-dimensional thinking

Posted: Saturday, April 3rd, 2010 @ 10:32 am in autonomy, policy | 4 Comments »

Many folks, like John Gruber, are responding to criticisms of the iPad’s closed ecosystem with the “it’s a tradeoff” idea: to have such a great computer, you need to lock it down. Some use the argument that Linux has never conquered the desktop, so there, open is incompatible with good usability (I’m looking at you [...]

The Accidental Tinkerer, Unexpected Lock-in, and Fatherhood

Posted: Friday, April 2nd, 2010 @ 2:04 pm in autonomy, personal, policy | 7 Comments »

Ben Fry recently explained his concerns about the iPad: I want to build software for this thing. I’m really excited about the idea of a touch-screen computing platform that’s available for general use from a known brand who has successfully marketed unfamiliar devices to a wide audience. [..] It represents an incredible opportunity, but I [...]