Friday, January 07, 2005

Whole Food$

I guess I am not the only one for whom the Whole Foods thrill has worn off.

Craigslist vs. eBay

I must say, Craigslist is more immediately satisfying; you can be rid of your stuff and have actual cash in your hand within hours after posting. Yes, you have to talk on the phone to total strangers and answer E-MAIL MESSAGES IN ALL CAPS, or like this one below, which is reproduced at a fraction of its actual size. (It was really red 24 point type! And he's serious!)

Real e-mail from Craigslist user

But Craigslist doesn't require lots of nosy information. There is no useless feedback mechanism where everybody lies about how helpful everybody else is for fear of revenge. Sure you get people asking if you'll sell for half the offering price; eBay handles that automatically, but if you just accept it as the price of admission, it's no big deal.

Plus, Craigslist is free for the kind of stuff I'm selling. People think it's non-profit and Craigslist does nothing to refute that idea, but there's nothing wrong with being a for-profit business that provides a useful service. And they now host your pictures!

Thursday, January 06, 2005

I miss Bot

I miss feeding Bot. Even though I am allergic to cats, in 2007 I could get my own cat once Allerca figures out how to make hypoallergenic ones.

Good to know there are scientists who think my cat allergy is a problem on par with stem-cell research, cures for cancer, and new drugs. I guess $3,500 a kitten is pretty good money. I assume they come from the factory fixed. For intellectual property reasons, of course.

Saturday is the deadline for vouchers from Microsoft

Between February 18, 1995 and December 15, 2001, if you purchased a computer that Microsoft forced the manufacturer to buy an operating system for or if you for some reason purchased Microsoft software on your own for use in California, you can get vouchers for:

  • $16 for each Microsoft Windows or MS-DOS license claimed
  • $29 for each Microsoft Office license claimed
  • $5 for each Microsoft Word, Home Essentials or Works Suite license claimed
  • $26 for each Microsoft Excel license claimed.

Details here.

Wednesday, January 05, 2005

Skype: so popular, it's a verb

Skype is a good way to talk to people overseas if you have high-speed Internet access.

Seems to me like they need the advice of a trademark attorney, though, if they want to keep their mark from becoming a common word.

Tuesday, January 04, 2005

Singapore economy grew 8.1% in 2004

Or that's what they're saying now. A tiny little island is subject to some volatility.

Ten most persistent software design bugs

These should have been fixed a long time ago.

Monday, January 03, 2005

Bay Area economy picking up?

While one would hardly expect The San Francisco Business Times to go negative on the Bay Area economy, this story about the job market talks about the demand for middle managers, mainly in non-software areas; in fact, quite possibly the non-tech workers who were priced out of the housing market during the boom.

The article also mentions the 370,00 jobs lost since 2000. The Census Bureau says that 334,243 people left the Bay Area (Marin, Contra Costa, Alameda, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara counties) for other states between July, 2000 and July, 2003. They haven't released county-by-county figures yet for 2004, but they say California as a whole lost 144,362 people to other states between July, 2003 and July, 2004. Anecdotally, it seems like a fair amount of that is people continuing to leave the Bay Area. When I head off to Singapore, that will count as international migration which is actually against the trend: the Bay Area is still gaining people from other countries and through births, so the population as a whole is rising.

Anecdotally, the software work that's here seems to be in consumer media like Google and Electronic Arts. Otherwise, the software industry left seems to be a product of government regulation. I was talking to a Chain Reaction customer who pointed out that biotech software development can't be done overseas because the FDA needs to be able to physically inspect the processes. There is also work in enterprise software to help with security and compliance (Sarbanes-Oxley and the post-Enron rules). If a Democratic administration were in charge, I'm sure the Republicans would be calling this red tape.

I suppose it's inevitable that the PC software industry had to grow up sooner or later and become stodgy and entrenched. The settlement of the Microsoft anti-trust case killed off any hope that there would be competition in basic office software. The merger of Oracle and PeopleSoft means that only big established players should bother in that space, too. IBM selling off its PC division to a Chinese company shows that not even IBM can command a premium for computer hardware anymore. It was only a matter of time before smart Indians and Chinese set up shop to develop software and offer services back home.

Silicon Valley of 2005 is quite different than the Silicon Valley I moved to in 1995. Back then, it wasn't completely decided that business desktops would be Wintel machines. Not every software product was based on the Internet—there were CD-ROMs, PDAs, video game platforms, and, of course, desktop software for business and consumers. Before the boom, there was diversity; it seemed everybody I knew was working on something interesting. The sense I had that something big was about to happen proved to be right. I feel the same way about Asia and Singapore in 2005. I'll know if I was right in another 10 years.

Barcode art

Nothing on 2D barcodes, so it's a little behind the times, but barcode art seems inevitable.

Pointillism in the kitchen


One way to make a cheap digital camera's output look better is to use Painter's auto clone feature to mimic pointillism.

Sunday, January 02, 2005

How nerdy are you?

I am only in the 67th percentile of nerdiness.