Archive for the ‘Computers’ Category

Flash Memory Takes on Hard Drives for Music

October 19, 2007

The humble hard drive is the ultimate repository for music in your home, office and car.  But mobile music increasingly sits on flash memory, whether in an iPOD, a more humble MP3 player, or on your cell phone.

Now USB flash drives you can wear on your wrist are bridging the gap between concert and computer, with artists like Matchbox 20, Willie Nelson and even the Bob Marley fan club selling memory sticks packed with music and memories (like photos) of the artists. 

Fans can not only leave a Willie concert stoned and satisfied, but take with them a special keep-sake; a downloaded version of that night’s concert.

Humble Hard Drive Wins Nobel Prize

October 10, 2007

It’s good to see the discoverers of the basic science around hard drive technology winning the 2007 Nobel Prize.  The hard drive has become the ultimate commodity product–everyone reading this has one, but like Rodney Dangerfield, the spinning disk that stores your applications, music and porn ”gets no respect.”

One industry spokesperson described manufacturing disk drives as “the longest-running industrial philanthropy.” If someone could find a way to make money with hard drives, that would be worthy of an economics Nobel!

PC World Editor Harry McCracken Quits

May 7, 2007

Tech journalists would generally rather write about cool products and score them for themselves than attack powerful companies.  Computer magazines, like automobile magazines, are generally uncritical “enthusiast” publications.  Journalists for both love to write stories with leads like “The new ________ is the best _______ yet.”

However, sometimes push comes to shove, and Harry McCracken, editor in chief of PC World, resigned last week after the magazine’s chief exec (or publisher) killed a story about Apple Computer.  The story, perhaps not wisely for McCracken’s tenure, was called “Ten Things We Hate About Apple.” 

That kind of story is only OK with the publisher (read ‘chief ad salesman’) if all “ten things we hate” are on the order of “1. Apple is so darned innovative that’s it’s hard to keep up with all their insanely great products.”

With more and more readers migrating to the Web, and thus not actually buying magazines,  advertising, both print and web, becomes increasingly important.  Indeed, the PC World publisher, Colin Crawford, claims 35% of IDG’s income comes from digital sources.  So what’s been called the  ‘Chinese wall’ between the editorial and advertising sides is becoming increasingly porous.  As McCracken seems to have discovered, editorial independence is falling by the wayside, and the ‘new Golden Rule’ is in place: “He who has the gold, makes the rules.”