Archive for Uncategorized

Virtually there …

An interesting demonstration of Cisco On-Stage TelePresence Holographic Video Conferencing from the Cisco Day event in Bangalore. Cisco wasn’t the first to use holographic elements in an on-stage presentation, but for those of us that jet around conferences and customer meetings on a regular basis, this may be a true travel upgrade.

 
icon for podpress  Cisco Day in Bangalore 2008 [11:25m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Cisco CEO John Chambers, who was live on the Bangalore stage, ‘beamed up’ Martin De Beer, the Senior Vice President of emerging Technologies, and Chuck Stucki the General Manager of TelePresence, live from San Jose, California. Chambers was then able to have a ‘face to face’ discussion with De Beer and Stucki on the future of Cisco TelePresence, demonstrating first hand the potential capabilities of the system in front of the watching audience.

Made possible by the Musion Eyeliner holographic projection system, fast network connectivity (and an open bar in the lobby of the conference for error correction). The system uses a single high definition camera to capture the image and a single HD projector to project it onto a special foil. According to Musion, “All the images used on a Musion Eyeliner system appear as three-dimensional images, but are projected as two-dimensional images into a 3D stage set. It is the mind of the audience that creates the 3D illusion. This means that production costs are minimal, needing only the single camera lens single camera lens for filming and a single projector for the playback.”

World development statistics, visualized

Hans Rosling shares his insights about the developing world statistics (life expectancy, wealth distribution, economic development rates) in a unique and perspective-changing way that highlights less obvious and debunks some of the common preconceptions:

 
icon for podpress  TED, February 2006: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Here’s the follow up presentation in March 2007 @ TED.

Learn more at Gapminder

Think …


Originally uploaded by saccades

Do you ever take a familiar road and get to a destination without remembering the individual steps and turns of your route? This brain on auto pilot time is my favorite time to think about a current challenge or a problem I am trying to get through.

Sent from BlackBerry

A catalog of maps, graphs and other visual tools

visualization methods

I found mindmaping very useful in collecting and organizing ideas and managing large amounts of information in a single place. Periodic Table of Visualization Methods created by folks at Visual Literacy organizes many more visualization methods by type of content and the purpose they are intended for: separate tools for visualization of data, information, concepts, strategy …

You can also grab a related paper, “Towards A Periodic Table of Visualization Methods for Management” (pdf file)
(via Seth Godin and Guy Kawasaki)

Organic or not

Wall Street Journal advice on when to buy organic foods:

Buy Organic:

  • Apples, peaches, bell peppers, strawberries, imported grapes, spinach, lettuce, potatoes, carrots
  • Milk and dairy products
    Free of the growth hormones that are given to conventionally raised cows.
  • Meat and poultry (free of growth hormones and antibiotics.
  • Baby food (Free of pesticide residues found in vegetables and fruits
  • Foods you eat a lot of

Conventional will do:

  • Broccoli, bananas, frozen sweet peas, frozen corn, asparagus, avocados, onions
  • Seafood (No USDA organic certification yet exists for seafood).
  • Some processed foods such as breads, chips, pasta, oils
  • Foods you eat only occasionally

(Another similar list) 

Highline

highline

Highline is a 1.5 mile elevated railway that runs along the West Side of Manhattan, hovering over the streets and passing through buildings. It’s currently closed to the public but there are many plans for it’s rehabilitation - including a park project and a possible expansion of the Whitney Museum. Fred Wilson at AVC points to the upcoming Highline Festival that will be hosted by David Bowie.

iPhone: pretty but not very smart

iPhone

iPhone is a pretty good step forward in the mobile phone appearance and user interface functionality. Dave Pouge of New York Times writes about its beautiful design and an innovative touch-interface. It’s also a long awaited iPod upgrade - although still closely tied with the desktop and iTunes. David Kirkpatrick, senior editor at Fortune, thinks that the iTunes dependence is “based on the ideas of the past” and favors the model where users pick from a giant online library and listen to whatever they want wherever they are. Tom Evslin, criticizes the phone’s service provider lock-in and lack of support for software-based VOIP applications like Skype that would allow free calls over WiFi.

In my opinion, iPhone does very little to challenge the status quo, change the mobile phone service business model or meaningfully extend functionality to enable users to do something new and useful. Apple spent a lot of time making incremental improvements and creating a sexier package for a pretty standard set of features: phone with a music player and a web browser.

I think that the device that aims to “revolutionize” needs to do much more. It’s got the looks, now let’s add some brains too. Here’s my wish list:

  1. Work anywhere / everywhere without dropping a call
    Recognize, auto-configure and securely utilize whatever network exists transparently - across technologies and service providers. It should allow the user to pick between the most economic coverage and the best performance but not require any technical knowledge. (Apple could also “virtualize” charges across providers based on usage to make this economically viable).
  2. Change the way we meet and interact while on the go
    A lot of integration related to location based services and social networks could be done here - e.g., check out a map to see who from your LinkedIn circle of interest (not the whole network!) is close-by and ping them to meet.
  3. Change the way we collaborate and manage work / life activities
    Build smarts that emulate a good executive assistant that knows who to let through and who to route elsewhere based on what you’re doing, where you are and what are your priorities. Calendar, contact info, project notes, tasks, priorities, GPS, and a lot of other things are already there - what’s missing is the context and some common sense to connect the dots …
  4. Keep us informed and entertained anywhere
    Cache multimedia content subscriptions without need to “plug-in” or manually synchronize everything (newspapers, lectures, eBooks, magazines, movies, music, rss feeds, podcasts, …) What I use on the web should just be on my phone too.
  5. Synchronize all data with an online vault in real time
    The phone should not live in bubble - it should know about and use the data where it lives without having to get its own copy of everything. Master copy of any user files, PIM data and pretty much anything else should be updated at its main location without the user having to do a thing. (Master location is what’s versioned, backed-up, archived, indexed …)
  6. Integrate all existing communication channels into one - with no mods required
  7. Keep data safe and under your control regardless of who’s got the phone
    Integrate security features that allow users to disable, locate and/or permanently erase the phone by accessing an online portal. Staying up all night trying to remember exactly what personal & business data was exposed on a lost PalmPilot is not the experience I’d like to repeat.

Admittedly, some of this this stuff could be accomplished in software on top of the iPhone hardware (lack of 3G speed notwithstanding). As of right now, there’s no iPhone dev kit and no 3rd party apps can be loaded onto the device. While all this may sound like a huge mashup of opensource code and existing APIs, it should probably be managed and done by a company with Apple or Google sense of control and attention to detail in oder to ward off bugs & reboots that would make the whole thing just a pile of metal and plastic (Treos loaded with 3rd-party hacks is far from reliable).

If you still want the pretty new iPhone, try waiting a bit longer after the initial introduction: there’s a lot of room for price incentives. AP quoted an iSuppli estimate that Apple built in a 50% gross margin into the device MSRP. According to the report, the 4-gigabyte version of the iPhone, with a retail price of $499, will cost Apple $245.83 to make. The 8-gigabyte version, priced at $599, will cost Apple $280.83.

I’ll wait for the gPhone and keep my trusted BlackBerry & iPod for now.

Fortune Magazine - Digital Edition

fortune

Fortune launched a neat new digital edition of their bi-weekly magazine. You can access it here with any web browser with a standard flash plugin (no special software downloads needed). The whole issue can be saved in your browser cache for offline viewing too. And the best part: you don’t need an account or a subscription to view the entire magazine online (for now anyway).

Digital edition is powered by OliveSoftware and they have some sample content available on their web site