Saturday, August 3, 2013
Top 5 Travel Tips With Google Glass
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Exploring the World #ThroughGlass
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Friday, March 25, 2011
"Open" in the age of Google a rant
I'm dissapointed in the inconsistency with Google's open vs. closed policy like the next guy but I think journalists really need to do their homework before "retweeting" news rather than research.
- Honeycomb is a fork of regular Android Source.
- Forked version has been released to select OEM's
. Don't forget that just as any 3rd party can fork android into a proprietary or sell their release.
- Android software stack has never been open (in the traditional bottom up sense). It always gets released once its baked. They claim Honeycomb isn't baked due to rush to compete with the iPad 2.
- For Application developers, the SDK was released months ago, when Google felt it was baked.
Am I missing something?

The real issue here is that Google sets up this better than holy expectation of themselves and we all hold them up to it. But it is unrealistic and bad business to think Google will and should be truly open. Google needs to be a bit more forthright since for the sake of competition, service providers, manufacturers and content providers.
I personally trust that Google will continue blazing trails, bringing Open Sourced software to the mainstream no matter what definition of that "open" may be. The fact that I can jump on github and download the source of Android
Brings me back to journalist reporting the same garbage over and over again. I can't think of how the delay of one specific version (Honeycomb) of android hurts anyone. There currently isn't even a market for DIY tablets (which is what honeycomb is built for) also this is marketed and has been released to the Motorola's and Samsung's of the world.
Calm down and enjoy your mass market plastic toys and leave the emotional attachment to stakeholders. Sheesh.
Read:
- http://source.android.com/about/philosophy.html (Philosophy and Goals)
- http://source.android.com/source/licenses.html (licenses)
"Google loves to characterize itself as 'open' and iOS and iPhone as 'closed.' We find this a bit disingenuous and clouding the real difference between our two approaches," Jobs is quoted. more by Steve Jobs |
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Google needs a consistent culture for app roll outs
I have come to like the Google Reader App on my Android-based cell phone; when it first launched on Android 2.2, it was slow and buggy, but these issues were quickly patched. I had expected it to be as baked as the Gmail app or the Youtube app.
Then came Android 3.0, optimized for larger screens. I took a look at the Market Place, but as this is a brand new platform, there were a few tablet-centric apps from Google. I know they are coming, but they should be here already, dammit. The promise was that older Android apps would scale fine, and I bought that crap. Sure, mobile-optimized apps would work on a larger screen, but when they would, they did so very poorly.
As you can see from the snapshot in the picture, Google Reader renders poorly in 3.0.
Google Reader for Android 3.0 needs to be optimized for larger-screen devices.
Since Google Reader is one of the core services that sync right from the jump with your Gmail account on Android devices, you'll have to expect as they rolled out Honeycomb on larger screens it would be part of the full suite of tablet-optimized apps.
Google accounts on Android sync with Books, Web, Calendar, Contacts, Email, Reader, Photos, Video, and soon Music. Reader, Docs, etc., should be part of this initial roll-out.
This is a new type of problem, a little different from the days of Microsoft shipping bundled software like Microsoft Works. This problem may be a good one in the new age of bridging your software platform ecosystem across interfaces of all sizes.
If Google is going to provide Android users seamless syncing of their photos, news feeds, social interactions, etc., at least ship with apps optimized for the screen size.
With the Android Market slated to grace Google TV screens "very soon," I would hope that some level of attention will be given to shipping with a suite of Google TV-native apps that gives developers inspiration and users solid features to get used to.
Originally written on Blogger for Android, which begs the question, where the HELL is Google Docs for Android tablets? Web? App? All the hoopla about focus on mobile and hiring frenzy and nothing to date? Bullshit.
Monday, September 27, 2010
Identity curation at its simplest
What is it?
About.me is a simple splash-page that allows you to manage your identity and personalize your online presence. There have been many attempts at allowing you to curate your identity, claimid comes to mind. And recently Google has been recently rumored to be working on Google.me, a service most people rumor to be a social network but I predict to be an identity curation layer to their popular search engine and profiles service. This site will allow us to find relevant sites associated to us.
Why is this important?
It’s not another social network. Thank God!! As more and more social and online services come out it is necessary to organize your online identity across these services. Think of it as one level above your profile pages.
Secondly you are able to track your online presence, status, tweets and reach. This simplified analytics screen brings you your online activity in a simplified dashboard.
Problems it solves?
You generally want people to find your true identity when people search for you or when you Google (or Bing) yourself. Its refreshing to see your true online identity in a fresh, personalized and well organized way.
You are also now able to keep track of your online influence from one screen (currently this is only useful if you use twitter or Facebook).
The negatives.
About.me decided to roll out this service in a private beta (land-grab) model. This means if you didn't grab "John Smith" or "JohnSmith" early millions of other John Smiths now claim that identity. Very annoying!
Secondly, looking at some of the impressive sample pages, I am concerned that most people will not be able to create splashy profile pages. Its pretty difficult for some of us to be that artistic. I fear if About.me reaches the mainstream it may become as chaotic as MySpace was and may be prone to scammers and spammers.
About.me/noble
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Managed Company Adds Hosted Microsoft Dynamics CRM 4.0 to our suite of services
Fully customizable CRM solution extends company's collaboration portfolio
Alexandria, VA (January 20, 2009) - Managed Company, an emerging software as a service (SaaS) provider specializing in messaging, eBusiness, and collaboration solutions, has announced that it is now offering Microsoft Dynamics CRM 4.0 as a hosted service. This offering extends Managed Company's reach within the productivity and collaboration space, offering an easily deployable and customizable customer relationship management (CRM) solution to its existing hosted Exchange email and collaboration, SharePoint collaboration platform, and Office Communications Server instant messaging and presence services.
Unlike other one-size-fits-all hosted CRM offerings, Managed Company's hosted Microsoft Dynamics CRM 4.0 is customizable to the specific needs of the individual end customer. This level of customization is possible because each CRM customer is guaranteed its own virtual dedicated server. Other vendors rely on shared server infrastructure and a basic control panel which limits their ability to meet every customer's specific needs. With Managed Company's new offering, customers gain a clear competitive edge because they are able to narrow sales leads, tactics, and sales and marketing campaigns to their unique core competencies and market demands. Managed Company's channel partners gain an enhanced revenue stream from the opportunity to fine-tune and tailor the CRM solution to the needs of each customer.
"Managed Company's hosted Dynamics CRM 4.0 enables us to add a high-margin recurring revenue stream offering into our product mix that tightly integrates into our existing hosted Exchange offerings," said Joseph Kowalenko, President of a mid-sized Chicago-based managed services provider and a Managed Company channel partner. "The flexibility of their service enables us to customize solutions for our customers, making us much more relevant to them than standard off-the-shelf software."
"CRM has become a business-critical application because optimizing and tracking the sales process has become more and more important to increasing sales and growing customer relationships," said Serguei Sofinski, Managed Company's CEO. "We're excited to provide a solution that will help our partners meet the specific needs of individual businesses, allowing them to increase revenue and form closer relationships with their customers."
In addition to customization benefits, Managed Company's Microsoft Dynamics CRM 4.0 is tightly integrated with our hosted Microsoft Exchange and Outlook, allowing a minimal learning curve and quick return on investment. It can be fully synchronized with email, tasks, contacts, and calendars. Users can also seamlessly export data into Excel for fast analysis and reporting.
Businesses around the globe looking for a trusted provider of SaaS, including Microsoft Dynamics CRM 4.0, Microsoft Exchange 2007, SharePoint, Office Communications Server 2007, and Online Business Management tools, visit Managed Company's Exchange Hosting Web site at www.exchangeasaservice.com