30 June 2007

Yay Capitalism

When I worked at the movie theater in high school, we had a special procedure for the openings of the really big movies. It wasn’t just about adding extra staff for the weekend–it was also about knowing how the whole operation was going to run. When did the various theaters let out? Where are people who show up early going to stand? How are we going to direct traffic as people exit when there isn’t much room in the lobby during the big rushes? Putting on a big production takes a lot of planning.

Being desirous of an iPhone but not being in the mood to take off work and wait for one, I went by the Apple Store in Clarendon last night expecting to see a huge line, and I did. Katherine had a happy hour to go to, so we grabbed some quick dinner and then she went to the bar and I went to check out the situation at the store. At 6:30, when I got in line, it had wrapped around to the Barnes & Noble about five stores down. A long line, but not crazy long, and it was moving, so I figured I’d stand around for a few minutes and try to gauge how long it’d take to move up a reasonable amount.

This is where I started to get impressed. Apple had staff walking up and down the line answering questions and just generally talking to them, setting up a friendly rapport. They said they had plenty of phones in stock, and they were counting the people in line to make sure that everyone there would be able to get one (two, actually). It was about 80 degrees out–hot, but not oppressively hot. Employees would come up every few minutes with bottles of water for anyone in line. As we got closer to the store entrance, we saw that they were letting in groups of 20 or so at a time. Everyone once in a while we’d hear cheering, which I assumed to be coming from random people who were leaving, very excited about their purchase. Once I was on deck, I realized that the cheers were coming from the employees. As they let our group into the store, the employees by the door would cheer and smile and high five everyone who entered. We were then led through the store in a serpentine path until we got up to the registers, where they had giant stacks of iPhones ready to be bought. (They had hundreds upon hundreds in stock.) When called, you walked up, asked for a phone, they’d swipe your card, and you were done. Each transaction took well under a minute. On the way out, more cheers and high fives from the employees.

It all sounds silly. They were putting on a show. The regional manager of the movie theater in high school said that the corporate philosophy was that we were supposed to “give the customer an experience.” This is what Apple was doing. You’ve talked yourself into buying an expensive gadget, and they’re going to make you feel good about it. Excited about it. High five.

Quick iPhone review (kottke.org)

Quick iPhone review (kottke.org)

Daring Fireball: iPhone First Impressions

Daring Fireball: iPhone First Impressions

Posting this in lieu of writing up my own. =)

29 June 2007

Geoff Johns on Sinestro Corps (spoilers)

Geoff Johns on Sinestro Corps (spoilers)

Ratatouille (2007): Reviews

Ratatouille (2007): Reviews

From early reviews it's at a 94. That'll come down, but it looks like Pixar has another winner here.

TiVo says Comcast accepts software for DVRs

TiVo says Comcast accepts software for DVRs

Not much of a story, but good to hear the plan is moving along.

28 June 2007

Awesome new Google Maps feature: Draggable Routes (kwc blog)

Awesome new Google Maps feature: Draggable Routes (kwc blog)

This is nice. I also like the feature they added a few months ago to make custom, annotated maps. Great for giving people directions if your place is hard to find based on the default directions.

Heart of the Corps

Heart of the Corps

Interview from January with Sinestro Corps artist Ethan Van Scriver

First Look: 'Stephen Colbert's Tek Jansen'

First Look: ‘Stephen Colbert’s Tek Jansen’

“It’s a fictional character based on a fictional Tek Jansen book, which is supposedly written by Stephen Colbert, who is actually Stephen Colbert playing a character named Stephen Colbert.”

Best Shots Extra: Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps Special

Best Shots Extra: Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps Special

This was the only comic book I read that came out this week, and man the trip was worth it. I realize that “event fatigue” is setting on, but this is one to pick up.

Plastic duck armada is heading for Britain after 15-year global voyage

Plastic duck armada is heading for Britain after 15-year global voyage

“For the past 15 years Curtis Ebbesmeyer has been tracking nearly 30,000 plastic bath toys that were released into the Pacific Ocean when a container was washed off a cargo ship.”

.mac iPhone RSS Reader

.mac iPhone RSS Reader

The page sniffs away and non-iPhone browser. No telling how it’ll work or if it will be for .mac users only.

26 June 2007

Apple - iPhone - Rate Plans for iPhone

Apple - iPhone - Rate Plans for iPhone

Looks much better than I expected, as cell phone contracts go.

25 June 2007

Viewing American class divisions through Facebook and MySpace

Viewing American class divisions through Facebook and MySpace

A Long Line for a Shorter Wait at the Supermarket

A Long Line for a Shorter Wait at the Supermarket

Wholefoods has started using one long checkout line that feeds to all the registers in New York. It’s much faster and, I’ve always thought, a much fairer way to handle lines.

Annotations - Justice League of America #10

Annotations - Justice League of America #10

21 June 2007

Who is Playing Nick Fury in Iron Man?!

Who is Playing Nick Fury in Iron Man?!

If you’ve read The Ultimates, you can guess the answer. What a bizarre way for that to all come about.

EA: Spore Delay "Misinformation"

EA: Spore Delay “Misinformation”

It is delayed, but “2009” meant “fiscal 2009”, which just means sometime after April.

20 June 2007

Spore Slip Sliding Away

Spore Slip Sliding Away

“Delayed indefinitely.” I wonder if the demos were more mock-ups than they appeared? It seemed like they had so much working a year ago. Maybe they built the whole engine and the game wasn’t any fun, just the technology?

17 June 2007

"Amazing, Amazing, Amazing"

As announced in Philadelphia this weekend, Amazing Spider-Man will move to a three-a-month shipping schedule in the fall. Currently there are three Spider-Man titles: Amazing Spider-Man, Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man, and Sensational Spider-Man (née the “Marvel Knights” Spider-Man). As with Superman and Action Comics and with Batman and Detective Comics, each title usually tells its own story about the main character. There’s the occasional crossover story, but generally you can just read one of the titles and get your fix. So there are three Spider-Man books, but most people don’t read all three. As editor Steve Wacker puts it:

Amazing is the “main” book to most readers and the feeling is that the important Spider-man stuff happens between its covers. No matter how good the creators and stories might be on the supporting books, when forced to choose, most readers lean towards Amazing.

According to Paul O’Brien’s estimates of Marvel’s March 2007 sales, Amazing Spider-Man 539 sold 137,730 copies. That’s a bit high as it was the first issue of a big storyline (Spider-Man being back in his black costume), but it’s by far Spidey’s best seller. That month Sensational sold 56,139 copies and Friendly Neighborhood sold 50,665, so both of them combined don’t sell what the “main” title does. I’d suspect that most of the 50,000 people buying one or the other of the latter two titles are buying both, so it’s possible to assume that there are about 50,000 hardcover Spidey fans out there who are buying all three titles every single month (plus, probably, Ultimate Spider-Man and New Avengers, of which he’s a member), which leaves ~80,000 readers who only buy Amazing each month.

So how many people are going to stick with Amazing when it goes tri-monthly? The 50,000 hardcore readers aren’t a concern – they already buy three Spider-Man books a month. How many of the remaining 80,000 readers will stick with the new book? If all of them do, Marvel will have picked up 160,000 sales each month, which is well over what launching two brand new books would have gotten them. If even half of the readers stick with it, that’s 80,000 extra readers, which is as well as most of their top books do (in March that’s what Uncanny X-Men sold, and it’s stayed at that level for years).

The question of course lies in how many people decide they care enough about Spider-Man to shell out the extra $5.98 for the two extra books each month. There won’t be a choice anymore to just read one book, so you’ll either pay $9.00 a month to read Spider-Man, or you’ll pay nothing. I’m a bit doubtful that I’ll stick with it, but the advantage is that the story will move along at a very nice pace. If the writing quality is good there will be some real momentum and, even if Marvel isn’t able to keep it up for more than a year or so, they could cut it back to bi-monthly and still probably stay above the numbers they were selling with three different books.

Differences in the Infinite Crisis hardcover and the original issues

Differences in the Infinite Crisis hardcover and the original issues

Another older link. DC rushed the monthly issues and the final hardcover contains new pages, fixes editing and coloring mistakes, and changes some dialogue.

Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer, reviewed. - By Dana Stevens - Slate Magazine

Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer, reviewed. - By Dana Stevens - Slate Magazine

“…an off-brand superhero movie, the cinematic equivalent of one of those generic breakfast cereals with a badly drawn squirrel for a mascot.” Right. It’s like getting a FF movie out was more important than making it good.

16 June 2007

Apple - Trailers - WALL•E

Apple - Trailers - WALL•E

Teaser for Pixar’s next movie (after Ratatouille), due out summer 2008.

15 June 2007

"Amazing, amazing, amazing."

“Amazing, amazing, amazing.”

Amazing Spider-Man to ship three times a month, Friendly and Spectacular to end.

Flash, the Fastest Man Alive cancelled after only 13 issues

Flash, the Fastest Man Alive cancelled after only 13 issues

Mark Waid to return to writing a new Flash series in the fall. This is like when they cancel a TV show after only 2 episodes.

Temporal Anomalies in Popular Time Travel Movies

Temporal Anomalies in Popular Time Travel Movies

I disagree with some of the analysis here (it puts too much thought into “original timelines”), but it’s a fun look at a lot of different movies.

Behind the Page: Ethan Van Scriver

Behind the Page: Ethan Van Scriver

This is an older one. Long interview with Green Lantern: Rebirth artist Ethan Van Scriver.

Portrait of the Modern Terrorist as an Idiot

Portrait of the Modern Terrorist as an Idiot

Be afraid!

14 June 2007

Ms. - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ms. - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The plural of “Ms.”, when referring to more than one woman, is “Mses.”, as in “Mses. Doe, Roe, and Woe.”

13 June 2007

Quiz: What American accent do you have?

Quiz: What American accent do you have?

I’m a “Midland.”

A Rat With a Whisk and a Dream - New York Times

A Rat With a Whisk and a Dream - New York Times

Piece about animating all the food in Pixar’s new film. Interesting that they ran into uncanny valley problems.

12 June 2007

Macworld: Opinion: Watch different

Macworld: Opinion: Watch different

What YouTube needs is an editor, or a very smart robot editor. I agree with this notion that there’s lot of good stuff out there waiting to be discovered, but it needs to be discoverable.

Font smoothing, anti-aliasing, and sub-pixel rendering - Joel on Software

Font smoothing, anti-aliasing, and sub-pixel rendering - Joel on Software

About the differences in how Microsoft and Apple handle fonts, as shown in the new Safari for Windows.

$afari

If you were wondering why Apple would bother releasing Safari for Windows, the answer is actually pretty simple: money. Sure, it contributes to the “iPod halo effect,” and it gets WebKit out there as a more prominent rendering engine, but the big reason is probably just cash. Every time you use the built-in Google search bar in a web browser, Google gives a small cut of the proceeds to the maker of the browser. That small cut adds up. According to Daring Fireball:

Safari is a free download, but it’s already one of Apple’s most profitable software products. […] Apple is currently generating about $2 million per month from Safari’s Google integration. That’s $25 million per year. If Safari for Windows is even moderately successful, it’s easy to see how that might grow to $100 million per year or more.

There’ve been many attempts to finance app development with advertising; what’s interesting about web browser search engine deals is that browser developers earn money – a lot of it – for ads that users were going to see anyway, just by performing the same search without the built-in integration.

One wonders what would happen if Google stopped being the dependable cash cow all these business models depend on it being.

iPhone FAQ

Maybe you’ve experienced this horror yourself. You pull your phone out of your pocket, and the web browser is open. OMG. How long has it been open? It is online? How much are they going to charge me for all that data my pocket presses invoked?

So here’s my big worry about the iPhone: how is the data stuff going to work? It has support for wireless internet access, so if you’re in range of an access point you can use all the web and email features through that network. The question I have is about cellular internet. Will they require people to buy an expensive data plan? If not, and I don’t have a data plan, what happens when my iPhone tries to go online over a cellular network? Will it warn me properly that I’m about to pay a hundred dollars per kilobyte? What about automated functions like email checking?

Twin Peaks FAQ: TV Episode Questions

Twin Peaks FAQ: TV Episode Questions

Lots of info on the show. (spoilers galore)

How the presidents stack up

How the presidents stack up

Graph of presidential approval ratings back to President Truman.

11 June 2007

WWDC 2007

Safari on Windows is weird. It’s like you’re almost to the Mac experience, but you’re not quite there yet. I guess this is what using iTunes is like on Windows, but I don’t use iTunes at work. At home I use Safari and at work I use Firefox. I don’t like having to get used to two browsers, but at least it reminds me where I am. Now that I can use Safari on a Windows machine at work, it makes my brain think I can do other Mac things, like hit F12 to bring up Dashboard. Also I’ve noticed that a few websites are sniffing for Safari and turning off features that it probably now supports.

Otherwise WWDC 2007 was pretty much standard. Nothing in 10.5 wow’d me, but I’m sure it’ll all be great to use. The translucent menu bar will take some getting used to, and I don’t quite understand how Stacks are implemented. Engadget has lots of info and photos up.

10 June 2007

Steve Jobs live from WWDC 2007 - Engadget

Steve Jobs live from WWDC 2007 - Engadget

For tomorrow. I usually depend on Mac Rumors Live and use this as a backup.

The truth about recycling | Economist.com

The truth about recycling | Economist.com

Lots of information about how recycling works.

Wait Until Dark

It says something about how good a movie is when you found it by reading a spoiler on a list called The Top 50 Movie Endings of all Time, and you’re still on the edge of your seat.

Audrey Hepburn was nominated for an Academy Award and a Golden Globe for her portrayal here of Susy Hendrix, a blind woman whose husband accidentally comes into possession of a doll filled with heroin. As three criminals try to find the doll in Suzy’s apartment, the level of tension rises to that of Rear Window and more recently Red Eye. At times it’s a little cheesy, as movies made in the 60s can be, but it’s worth it by the time you get to the ending.

08 June 2007

del.icio.us + Facebook

del.icio.us earlier this week rolled out an official Facebook app, which will publish your links onto your Facebook profile. I wasn’t able to get it to work initially, but DrOct found the link to the del.icio.us application, which worked for me once I clicked through a few pages. (The URL has the “wm” subdomain. Not sure if it’ll redirect properly if you’re on a different network, but you could try changing that manually.) I might look into adding my Vox feed on there, too, at some point.

I’m new to the Facebook trend. After Friendster fizzled I gave up mostly on the social network thing, but Facebook seems to have its act together and is a pretty nice platform.

In other web publishing news, there’s a new version of Movable Type out in beta. kwc has written a few things about it, but so far I’ve avoided to desire to tinker. In the end I love tinkering with things but lose interest whenever I have to do too much backend server work. TypePad in the past has gotten that balance for me just about perfect, and now that it supports Markdown I’m much inclined to switch back there. My hesitation is that Vox does so much so nicely, it’s free, and even with cross-posting I don’t like keeping more than one blog. In the back of my mind I’m toying with finding a place to park the frontpage of my domain somewhere free, and just syndicate everything from Vox and del.icio.us to it, which is mostly what I do now, anyway, on david.ely.fm. If Vox were to support domain mapping all my troubles would go away, but I don’t see that happening on such an entry level-aimed service.

The AfterEllen.com Hot 100 List

The AfterEllen.com Hot 100 List

Provides an interesting contrast to Maxim’s Hot 100.

Scientific American: Ask the Experts: Archaeology/Paleontology: What is the latest theory of why humans lost their body hair? Why are we the only hairless primate?

Scientific American: Ask the Experts: Archaeology/Paleontology: What is the latest theory of why humans lost their body hair? Why are we the only hairless primate?

Jeffrey Zeldman Presents : E-mail is not a platform for design

Jeffrey Zeldman Presents : E-mail is not a platform for design

THE TEN

THE TEN

You had me at “from the creators of The State.”

07 June 2007

How Big Will the iPhone Be?

How Big Will the iPhone Be?

Businessweek says two sources have told them they’ll have 3 million units on sale on June 29.

06 June 2007

New Metro Seats

A few days ago I rode in one of the Metro cars with the new experimental, more New York-like seat configurations. On alternating sides of the train car they’ve removed one set of forward-/rear-facing seats and replaced them with inward-facing seats next to the two that are normally there, and removed the glass barrier. It gives some more room to stand and let people pass by as they leave the train while still leaving plenty of seating. I very much liked the new setup and hope they expand it linewide. The trade-off of course is that there are fewer seats, so old people and pregnant women are going to have to suck up the Milgram anxiety and ask people for seats if no one offers, but as one who’s usually standing, anyway, it doesn’t affect me much.

There's Twitter in My Facebook!

There’s Twitter in My Facebook!

Twitter app for Facebook.

face hugger

face hugger

del.icio.us app for Facebook.

04 June 2007

iPhone Ads: Perfect advertising

iPhone Ads: Perfect advertising

Why the new ads are so good.

Embiggen, a perfectly cromulent word (kottke.org)

Embiggen, a perfectly cromulent word (kottke.org)

“Embiggen” winds up in a paper on string theory.

03 June 2007

Apple - iPhone - TV Ads

Apple - iPhone - TV Ads

Official: on sale June 29.

Knocked Up

Metacritic’s currently showing Knocked Up at an 85, which is about right. Very funny, not quite historic. As in The 40 Year Old Virgin [sic], writer/director Judd Apatow knows how to make an amusing, raunchy comedy, but doesn’t know which scenes to cut out. 129 minutes was too long for this movie, as much as I enjoyed it. The extra running length gives time to flesh out the characters, but it also makes the formulaic “characters go into a slump before the third act” part seem way too perfunctory. Wedding Crashers was guilty of this, too. Aside from that, unless The Simpsons Movie turns out to be way better than anyone expects, this will probably be the comedy of the summer.

01 June 2007

Schrodinger's lolcat on Flickr - Photo Sharing!

Schrodinger’s lolcat on Flickr - Photo Sharing!

I think this wins the lolcat game. Time for something new.

Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End

Remember how Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl was this awesome movie about a ghost ship?

Remember how Pirates of the Caribbean: Dean Man’s Chest was almost an awesome movie about sea monsters, but it was 15 minutes too long and didn’t have an ending for no reason whatsoever?

Now, imagine if instead of being 15 minutes too long, it was three hours too long!

The real shame of Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End isn’t how bad it is, or how boring it is, or how long it is, or how unnecessary the plot is, but at how good it could have been, had it been made an entirely different movie. When we saw the second one, my feeling was that it should have been a closed story. Jack could easily have had a fight with Davey Jones at the end, killed him, and sailed away to another adventure. The third one could have been about mermaids, or voodoo priestesses, or the fountain of Youth, or any other sea legend. Instead, it’s a sequel to a movie that didn’t need one with no purpose of its own.

Ah well, at least there’s a Fantastic Four sequel to look forward to, right?

"A Hell of an Experience"

“A Hell of an Experience”

Interview with Leon Vitali, Stanley Kubrick’s assistant for 25 years.

Platform 9 3/4, King's Cross Station

Platform 9¾, King’s Cross Station

Harry Potter comes to life.