Wow, end of September, end of Q3, end of ... summer. And now onward into fall and the holidays and so on, all the stuff that happens in Q4. Next weekend I have the Furnace Creek 508, which I've been thinking about all summer, and so that feels like the real end of Q3, but here we are. Today was quite a day; started out driving down to Vista for a planning meeting, then drove up to the Valley for another meeting (and yes, it rained, and yes, I had mega traffic), and finally made it home in time for a nice dinner :) Yay. Meanwhile, it's all happening...
Don Draper pitches the Facebook Timeline. This is great, but I'm not a big fan of the timeline. Actually I don't mind the timeline, I mind that my News Feed isn't in chronological order anymore. Anyway.
John Gruber's take on Amazon's New Kindles is much the same as mine. "It’s all about the content, though. That’s the difference that other tablet makers missed. Motorola, Samsung, RIM - they seem to be chasing the iPad on specs, building the best tablet they can manage at the same starting price of around $500. But they have no clear message telling people what you can do with them."
Apparently Amazon are considering bringing Silk to Windows, Mac, and Android. Not surprising.
Meanwhile: Finally, the tablet to make HP and RIM feel better. "On NBC's 'The Office,' the fictional Dunder Mifflin team was forced to sell a triangle-shaped tablet, dubbed the Pyramid." Hey you never know, with the right content...
This is just fantastic: Life of George melds Lego bricks with IOS for 'digital-to-physical' gameplay. Apparently you build stuff with the Legos, then take a picture to get credit inside the iPhone App. A whole new category.
Mike Arrington takes a look back one year to AOL's acquisition of TechCrunch, which blew up spectacularly in recent weeks, leading to Mike's departure. Too bad because there has been so much interesting tech news of late, and news about news isn't so interesting.
Check this out: $40M Solar Sailboat for Eco-Conscious Yachtsman. Does it actually sail? Well yeah, apparently. And it's so pretty!
I can *so* relate to this: My non-linear work stream. "In the era before Blackberrys, iPhones, instant messaging, social networks, and blogs, I had a predictable day." Eliminating all the interrupts and focusing is hard.
I'm gonna wrap with a couple of most excellent pictures, first, here we have one from a surf-city surf dog competition held in Huntington Beach:
And here's my picture of the day quarter, a bunch of Giant Panda cubs, all taking a nap:
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