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Unfortunately, that day has come

5 Oct

The beginning of the video of yesterday’s event lingered on an empty reserved seat in the front row. I thought then, “oh. shit.” I knew it was intentional. I knew it was a sign. A missing man formation had been flown. Steve’s time was limited.

There are two people who greatly influenced the path my life took: Steve Jobs and my father. Both died this year of pancreatic cancer.

In the 90s, I had just finished a failed attempt through architecture school. The day I walked out of Wentworth, the building industry collapsed. I would never work in the field I spent five years learning. Around six years earlier my Dad had bought me a Macintosh. As the desktop publishing industry was growing out of nothing, I was there in the early days. I helped steer two print shops into the digital age. One of them with my dad. Had Jobs not created that industry, I would have likely enlisted in the Marines.

When I looked back on the last months of Dad’s life, I remembered there was a point where he could no longer do the things he loved to do: cook and photography. When he died in February, the new camera he had bought in December had less than ten photos on it.

In August, when Steve sent out his note saying he was no longer able to function as CEO, I thought that was one of his turning points. He wasn’t able to do what he loved: Run Apple. I knew then he didn’t long have to live. Writing that letter must have been one of the hardest things he had to do. Today is a hard day. I can’t help but think of my Dad and the influence they had on my life. Thank you, both of you, I wouldn’t not the man I am today without either of you.

I love this bit from his Stanford commencement address:

Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.

Go and live your own life.

Reflections on today’s Apple presser

5 Oct

At the beginning of the keynote, the camera panned to an empty reserved seat at the end of the row. One imagines this was left open for Steve Jobs, who decided against attending the event. It could be due to his health or wanting Tim Cook to have the entire spotlight. I also wonder if was intentionally left open — and in a prominent position — as kind of a “missing man” formation. A seat left in memory.

Tim Cook is not Steve Jobs. Tim’s presentation style is akin to a Southern Gentleman. Steve had a bit of snake-oil salesmanship. Both are effective, but I could also see where the first 30 minutes may have caused a few people to nod off. Thirty of the 90 minutes were given to sales updates and ego stroking. I need to remember these presentations are not geared towards the same crowd at WWDC. Apple is setting expectations for their quarterly results in a few weeks. I wasn’t feeling well and following the live blogs reminded me it’s not a waste of time to have take out delivered right before the event starts. The problem with skipping the statistics is people will think Apple is hiding something. Tim Cook is very much a numbers game and I think talking about these let him ease into the rest of the talk.

iOS 5

Cards was subject to much derision and sarcasm by me until I remembered that iPhoto does the same thing already. I still think it was in a curious place in the presentation; App-type stuff is usually handled by Phil Schiller. For Scott Forestall to lead off with it made me think they needed to show something new. I’ve written about Cards here, but I can see myself using it. Taking a picture with my iPhone on vacation and sending it to friends and family as a card will be something I do, albeit once or twice a year.

Other than that and a few more details about the Camera app, the iOS 5 portion sounded like the sports highlights at 10pm. It’s all stuff we’ve seen before. The new notifications will be awesome and I hope there is an easy way for me to move my Zinio subscriptions into Newstand.

iCloud

It’s a First World problem, but getting data to and from my iPad is a frustration point. I use Pages across the board, but right now editing documents across devices is a mess. With iCloud, finally all my devices will have the current version of the document without me doing a damn thing. Apps will auto-download between devices. It’s not part of iCloud, but the new wireless sync means a recently-added PDF to iTunes will end up in iBooks.

The PC-free component is going to be nice. I keep a variety of 30-pin cables around the house so I can sync my data. Now, I won’t have to. Find my Friends has uses and seems a logical extension of Find my iPhone. I expect its use to be mainly between parents and their kids, and suspecting spouses.

iPhone 4S

It sharing the same form factor and name as the iPhone 4 didn’t surprise me. Apparently it did for some other people. Betting on Apple doing anything like they have in the past is a fools game (see: no iPhone in June), but I think Apple has been happy with the iPhone 4 design and seem to like to keep big form-factor upgrades to every two years. I wouldn’t be surprised if Apple finally has enough of this naming thing and throws the iPhone into the Mac naming convention: iPhone, late 2011. People bitching because it’s not the iPhone 4 will get old.

The camera is amazing. As a semi-pro photographer, it’s appealing to me. The iPhone 4S camera isn’t as good as my DSLR, but it’s getting better than most point and shoots. Shooting at 1080p video will be amazing.

Siri was the star of the show. If that Apple video isn’t a gigantic smoke and mirrors trick, we’re at the point of Tony Stark in Iron Man talking to his computerized assistant about what to do with his schedule. I can’t wait to see what the reviews say about this. Sadly, I can’t upgrade for a while so I’ll probably hold out until the true iPhone 5 next year.

 

Remembering Dad

24 Mar

Photo Courtesy Gateway Camera Club

When Steve Jobs took his second medical leave early this year, there was much wailing and screaming from people that Jobs needed full disclosure on the issues and ignoring his request for privacy. As a tech writer, it was easy for me to honor his request for privacy. I simply said, “What if this were my dad? Would I want details of his illness treated with all the decency and honor the National Enquirer treats celebrity marriages?”

The question was not rhetorical. Like Jobs, my dad had pancreatic cancer. Unfortunately, my dad lost his battle February 26th. I didn’t think I’d be able to hold it together to give a eulogy, so this is what I would have said.

My dad fought cancer with pride, dignity, faith, and a healthy amount of German stubbornness. The statistics for pancreatic cancer are grim: most die in the first six months, only five percent survive past five years. Dad made two, and arguably they were the best years of his life.

Our family was never great at staying in touch. Months would go by without as much as a phone call. Dinners were few and usually around holidays. That changed when he got sick. Almost every Sunday I’d go to their house for dinner. Dad and I took a road trip of the type we’d often talk about and never do. We spent nearly a week on the road, going to Steamtown in PA, a train convention in lower NY state, and then up to see his sister in Syracuse. I think he needed to get away from being a cancer patient for a bit. He and I made a deal: I wouldn’t fuss over him, but he had to be honest on how he was feeling. That was a moot point. He had more energy than I did. Doing all the driving wiped me out and he’d be up, ready to go. We had made plans to go to Altoona to see trains at Horseshoe Curve, but, sadly, the chemo kicked the crap out of him and he just wasn’t up for it.

I’m going to remember a lot of laughs and good times for years. He and I devouring about 15 racks of baby ribs. His love of spicy chili and Mom’s hating it. We had more patience with each other than we normally would. Dad and I had horrid tempers, and not long after his diagnosis we accidentally dropped an air conditioner out the window. Normally, this would cause an eruption; instead he and I laughed our asses off. My dad had a most unusual obsession with the Wegman’s food chain; a store he had only been in twice. He’d bring his Wegman’s bag to his local supermarket just to piss them off.

His love of photography presented a challenge getting photographs together for his wake. As the dedicated photographer, there weren’t a heck of a lot of photos of him. Instead, however, looking through several thousand slides and prints, I was able to view the world through his eyes. I was able to see his love of family (and see my baby pictures for the first time), his love of nature, and his love of auto races.

Dad was the single-most influential person in my life. Every hobby I have, came from him. My love of reading, photography, trains, and technology came from him. He bought me a Commodore 64, and then my first Macintosh. We were both involved in the printing business; even worked at the same company at one time.

Jim fought the disease with everything he had. He fought it with everything I had, and he fought it with everything Mom had. While dad was truly blessed with amazing medial care, it was Mom who enabled him to be as successful as he was. She made sure he got everything he wanted and needed to be win his battle, but more importantly, she made sure he got everything he didn’t want, but needed to win. Thank you, Mom. You made a difference.

I feel his presence every day. Every picture I take with his camera, I feel like he’s looking through the lens with me — and Dad, I hoped you liked the view in that bar in CT. Photography is coming very easy to me this time. Before, I fought with the technical aspects. Now, I feel like he’s whispering in my ear the things I should be doing. It hits me he’s gone when I think, “this photo came out well; I wish I could show Dad.” But, in a way, I know he’s seeing them.

The last dream I had about him, he was in my Mom’s car, pulling away from the house waving good be. I like to think that means he knows we’re going to be ok and he’s moved on to his next stage. I said this on your deathbed, and I’m going to say it again: Thank you, Dad. You were the best friend I had, and the best Dad I could have hoped for. Thank you for everything.

World of Warcraft Cataclysm Review

5 Jan

Azeroth is sundered! A dormant dragon awakens. A colony of dwarves lose their ancestral home and need a hobbit to get it back — oh wait, sorry, wrong fantasy series. While Cataclysm ($39.99) is World of Warcraft’s third expansion, the overall changes to the world make this more like WoW 2.0, or, at the least WoW 1.5. What’s nice is a lot of the changes will be available to all current subscribers, even if you don’t buy the expansion.

What You Get For Free

As part of the — wait for it — Cataclysmic event that sundered Azeroth, almost every area in the game has seen its geography change; the only unchanged areas are the ones from the previous two expansions. An ancient dragon, Deathwing, has risen from within the world, and his hatching effected something similar to the movie 2012, only with better acting.

Blizzard has also learned from past mistakes and greatly streamlined leveling your character. Previous quests involved a gigantic amount of running around for little reward; now the quest hubs are gathered closer together and the game does a much better job at guiding you along your path.

New Starting Areas

Blizzard has introduced two new races: the Worgen (a lyncanthropic race) and the Goblins (short little green men with a love of explosives). Each race receives their own new starting area for new characters, complete with new and improved beginner quest mechanics. Each starting area takes about 5-6 hours to complete before you can enter the main game.

Of the two new areas, I enjoyed the Goblin one the best. Blizzard does well when it lets its irreverence and sense of humor shine, and the Goblin area is lighthearted, fun, and full of explosives. The Worgen area is much more serious. You’re cursed to become a lycan and during the starting experience you’re fighting to take back your city. Which would you rather do: watch the game fight a huge battle for you (your involvement in this epic event is limited), or roast zombies on a pair of rocket boots? I’m going with rocket boots, every time.

The Worgen area also shows an odd lack of polish by Blizzard’s standards.  Usually when there’s an epic battle at the end of a quest line, the game shows a “next battle in 10 minutes” popup so you know you should hang around for a few, or maybe see what the baby has been crying about all this time. There isn’t one in the last battle for the Worgens, and it’s easy to get thoroughly confused about what you need to do.

Raised Level Cap and New High-Level Areas

Cataclysm raises the level cap from 80 to 85, and it’s a much shorter journey to max level than in previous expansions. We were seeing “server first” announcements for level 85s less than 24 hours into the expansion launch, and even with my slow-paced leveling my character was 85 in less than a week. Previous expansions took me several months to reach max level. Frankly, I wasn’t upset at how quickly it happened. I enjoy the game more without the need to grind out levels, and taking new characters through the revamped zones is keeping me occupied.

There are roughly seven new zones in Cataclysm, a slight reduction in the number of new areas usually included in a new expansion. I found two particularly notable: Vashj’ir is an entirely underwater area, and Uldum is basically the plot of the three Indiana Jones movies rolled into one quest line. In Uldum, Blizzard again shows its sense of humor, and it’s my favorite of the new areas.

One drawback to the new areas, though, is how Blizzard has phased the zones. In Wrath of the Lich King, the previous expansion, Blizzard introduced phasing as a way of having your adventure area change as you completed quests. A town might be intact during one part, but destroyed later on in the story.With Wrath, the phasing was limited to a couple of high-end zones. In Cataclysm, it’s much more prevalent. Unfortunately, if you’re not on the exact same point in the story as a friend, you won’t be able to play with them. A friend of mine and I were “out of phase” and it was simply because I had accepted two more quests than she had. As a result, Cataclysm is likely to feel a lot more like a single-player game than an MMO at times.

Playing Well With the Mac

Blizzard has always released its products simultaneously for Mac (s aapl) and Windows(s msft), and Cataclysm is no different. Since it’s a native build and not a port using Cider, it runs very well on the Mac. I played through the entire expansion using a mid-2009 13-inch MacBook Pro with the Nvidia (s nvda) 9400M chip, and even with that anemic graphics processor it ran very well. I experienced no crashes or unusual hangups, although the main cities can drag your frame rates down.

Verdict

I like that rather than tack on more “previously undiscovered” zones to the game, Cataclysm focuses on the continents that launched six years ago. Other MMOs (I’m looking at you, EverQuest) have added so many new areas, that it becomes a little ridiculous. The hard mode in Cataclysm dungeons, called Heroics, are indeed fairly hard and require more player skill to complete than players will be used to — Wrath’s Heroics were fairly tame and a lot of us got lazy.

Highs: Big changes to the WoW game world, for all players.

Lows: Phasing takes quite a bit of the multiplayer out of this MMO.

If you’ve got a character that can take advantage of the new high-level zones, Cataclysm is a lot of fun. But even if you’re not a current subscriber, this is one of the best times to start playing. With the revamped low-level requiring only an active subscription, and with lots of old players creating new characters, there’s a ton of new people running around to play with, which is the point after all.

Apple Store Boston Line

24 Jun

Cat Photo For Monday

15 Mar

Because you can’t get enough cats.

There’s an app for everything…

9 Feb

I checked out the new Siri app. It’s a neat little personal assistant
app. You can find out what restaurants are near you, movie times,
weather and even send reminders to yourself.

I decided to test what it can find. Yep, there’s an app for funding
hookers. Bet Apple loves that.

My Home Screen

14 Oct

Making Movies

28 Sep

They are shooting a movie near work.

Christmas Carol Themed Car

25 Sep

As seen in South Station

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