Don’t call Google+ a social network.
Even though its users have profiles, follow others, post status updates, upload photos and videos, and “+1″ a bunch of stuff.
But don’t call it a social network.
digressing, one cup at a time
Don’t call Google+ a social network.
Even though its users have profiles, follow others, post status updates, upload photos and videos, and “+1″ a bunch of stuff.
But don’t call it a social network.
Website Hunch.com recently published a large and detailed infographic comparing Mac and PC users, based on questions answered by visitors to the site. The non-scientific study, which was republished on a few other tech blogs, basically confirms every stereotype about Mac and PC users: that Mac users are young, liberal, artsy-fartsy types, while PC users are old, conservative, spreadsheet fanatics.
I don’t know how much of that is actually true. Instinctively, I suppose it’s fairly accurate just based on the kind of image Apple has spent decades cultivating. Apple has always wanted us to see it as the anti-Microsoft, even going back to their infamous “1984″ commercial. But one area of the infographic that I think is entirely wrong is the Technology category, and more specifically this stat:
Mac people are 21% more likely than PC people to consider themselves computer-savvy gearheads.

Gizmodo has a post out about what Microsoft’s successor to Windows 7 will look like. Pretty much anyone you talk to will mention the same things: more cloud integration, better hardware management, better security, faster boot time, expanded use of virtualization, etc. All good answers, and I think accurate ones.
But my gut tells me that if you really want to know what Windows 8 will look like, just look at an iPad. Forget Windows XP, Vista, or even Windows 7. Windows 8 will more closely resemble Apple’s iOS or Google’s Chrome OS than any of its predecessors.
Why? Several reasons:
If this photo from ZDNet of an early iteration of Internet Explorer 9 is any indication of what the final product will look like, I have to say it’s downright horrid.

I know, I know, I’m probably the only person in the world who thinks that. Just like I’m the only person to not really care for the stripped-down look of Google Chrome (which Microsoft is clearly imitating).
I understand the trend toward leaner and cleaner browsers: fewer buttons, consolidated toolbars, a fear of anything that might impede upon the sacred real estate that is the interwebs. I understand it, I just don’t fully agree with it.
My 12th-grade English teacher would kill me if she read this blog. As is the case throughout most of the blogosphere, the style of writing here is extremely informal. So if you’ve read any of my posts, you’ve probably noticed I often start sentences with the word “so”, a common practice in conversational English but technically incorrect since it’s used as a conjunction.
So who should we denounce for this scandalous practice? According to the New York Times, it’s all Silicon Valley’s fault:
OK, @GitRDoneLarry playing with decapitated squirrel heads is pretty funny. #OnlyInAmerica - 13 hours ago
For my nurse-to-be wife… RT @donttrythis: Nice! Travel through the body one slice at a time. Best. Gif. Ever. http://t.co/MMhREOy4 - 15 hours ago
Don't announce, "This is the best Croatian restaurant ever!" RT @CiscoServerGeek: Headed to a Serbian restaurant. Any recommendations? - 16 hours ago
Note to self: Clicking the title bar in Chrome doesn't scroll the page back to the top like in iOS. #butittotallyshould - 16 hours ago
Someone just referred to the Apple Store as the "iStore". Please tell me some hipster optometrist has already jumped on that name. - 19 hours ago