All Things D interview with Steve Jobs
The Wall Street Journal posted the full interview this morning. Here it is - probably one of his best interviews (he does not give many).
Apple Shows Us What HTML5 Can Do
I love my Google Chrome Extensions!
Google Chrome extensions are awesome. They install and uninstall quickly without a re-start of the browser. And they just work. Currently have installed:
1. Google Mail Checker Plus - uses the notifier API for awesome access to new mail and the ability to mark as read, archive and delete without even opening the Gmail site. A must have if you are a heavy Gmail user (also works with Google Apps).
2. goo.gl URL Shortener - I use bit.ly most of the time, but have started using Google's shortener recently and this is a great way to shorten a link with 1 click and have it sent to the clipboard. You can also configure this to work with Twitter and other media sites.
3. Google Voice (official extension) - shows number of calls and quick access to Voice
4. BlogThis (official extension) - great way to make a quick post to blogger
5. Google Buzz Button by Shareaholic - the best standalone Buzz button out there.
6. PingThis! - post to your Ping.fm account with one click
7. Bit.ly - official extension, drops down a shortener tool and a quick way to Tweet the shortened link, track URL traffic, pretty much everything you can do from the website.
8. Posterous for Chrome - quickly post to Posterous (same functionality as the bookmarklet only in a plug-in).
Apple Sells 2 Million iPads Since April Debut - Bits Blog
Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP
Apple announced Monday that it had reached a new milestone with its iPad, selling two million devices in less than 60 days.
The latest announcement shows that Apple is selling one million iPads a month, an average of nearly 35,000 a day. The iPhone, which went on sale in mid-2007, took 74 days to reach one million sales.
In a news release, Steven P. Jobs, Apple’s chief executive, said customers around the world who are buying the iPad “seem to be loving it as much as we do.” Mr. Jobs also said, “We appreciate their patience, and are working hard to build enough iPads for everyone.”
Shipment of the international version of the iPad was delayed by several weeks as Apple struggled to meet demand.
Last week Apple began selling the iPad in nine countries, including Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan and the United Kingdom. Shoppers waited in long lines to buy the device, which went on sale in Apple locations and some partner electronic stores.
Applications for the iPad continue to trickle into the iTunes App store. As of Monday the store listed 8,027 iPad-specific applications available for download. There are currently nearly 200,000 applications available for the iPhone and iPod Touch.
On Monday news also began surfacing that Amazon hopes to announce a new, thinner model of its Kindle e-reader by late August. The move would continue to keep the Kindle relevant in the battle for consumers and the digital e-reader space.
Not bad for a "niche" product.
My social workflow
Buzz from Bwana McCall
Link to this post:
http://www.google.com/buzz/100971870367870906394/B8FUpCY8gpY/You-know-Ive-been-screaming-this-for-days-No-one 12:40 pm Bwana McCall: You know, I've been screaming this for days. No one wants to accept that Flash in its current state is bloated?Latest Steve Jobs-note says he 'respects and admires' Adobe... - 9 to 5 Mac - Apple Intelligence
1:50 pm Jorge Sierra: Bwana, I agree it is bloated, but it is also ubiquitous (open standard or not).
1:59 pm svartling ™: That's why I think that Apple is doing the right thing. HTML5 is the future.
2:00 pm svartling ™: Oh, and I had some fights here on Buzz about the exact same thing :) Not many is thinking the same :)
2:00 pm svartling ™: I think it's because there is so many Android FanBoys here on Buzz...
2:21 pm Bwana McCall: I can understand disagreement on Apple's decision to not offer a choice to bring your device to its knees, but to ignore Flash's shortcomings, I don't understand. I respect Android enthusiasts because a ton of mobile developers have been waiting for something like this for a long time, but Adobe? Adobe has a LOT of work to do on mobile flash. The rules are very different from the desktop.
2:23 pm Jorge Sierra: Ultimately, HTML5 needs to win the battle. The bottom line is that although some iPhone users may be a little annoyed, they are willing to accept they'll never see Flash on their phones. It's not something that would ever keep anyone from purchasing an iPhone.
2:26 pm Brenda Young: Of course it's bloated and causes all kinds of problems but, I don't think Apple's boycott will make it go away.
2:54 pm Chris Sparno: I saw this post earlier from a twitter mention and while I really do think Apple and Adobe don't "hate" each other, I think it's within Apple's rights to protect the performance and user experience of their platform. Even if you forget about Flash being slow and eating your battery, Apple is more afraid of having a ton of apps that rely on Adobe Flash and then Adobe pulling the plug on Apple-compatible Flash (or having the rest of the world be on version 14.0 and the iPhone version being at version 10 for the next 5 years. It's happened before and Apple is afraid of getting burned yet again. Remember what happened when OS X came out? How long did it take for native Adobe apps to appear. Oh yeah, just now - with the current Creative Suite release. This is what Apple fears - other companies gaining control of the user experience and other companies having the power to "kill" their platform with slow releases/deployments.
2:58 pm Chris Sparno: One more thing (as a former Apple insider): Apple's strength has always been their ability to control "the entire widget", from hardware to software. This is what makes the user experience so unique and so seamless. Apple will do whatever it takes to protect that ecosystem - the reason you will never see iPhone OS on other phones or MacOS on generic PC boxes. Once you abstract hardware from software, the experience tends to decline. Just look at the variances in Android hardware/software and the experiences between Nexus One, HTC Hero, Droid, etc. They all have the same OS but different out of the box user experiences. Apple knows that to stay profitable, they need to maintain control of the entire user experience, from hardware design to software delivery. It's what has brought them from the brink of extinction to a viable profitable company.
Twitter Blog: The Twitter Platform
Monday, May 24, 2010
Enduring ValueWhen we discuss the future of Twitter, we focus on the mechanisms through which we can build a platform of enduring value. The three mechanisms most important to building such a platform are architecting for extensibility, providing a robust API to the platform’s functionality, and ensuring the long-term health and value of the user experience.
The purpose of this post is to explain what we are building, how we will sustain the company and ecosystem, and where we believe there will be great opportunities for the vast ecosystem of partners.
Twitter is an open, real-time introduction and information service. On a daily basis we introduce millions to interesting people, trends, content, URLs, organizations, lists, companies, products and services. These introductions result in the formation of a dynamic real-time interest graph. At any given moment, the vast network of connections on Twitter paints a picture of a universe of interests. We follow those people, organizations, services, and other users that interest us, and in turn, others follow us.
To foster this real-time open information platform, we provide a short-format publish/subscribe network and access points to that network such as www.twitter.com, m.twitter.com and several Twitter-branded mobile clients for iPhone, BlackBerry, and Android devices. We also provide a complete API into the functions of the network so that others may create access points. We manage the integrity and relevance of the content in the network in the form of the timeline and we will continue to spend a great deal of time and money fostering user delight and satisfaction. Finally, we are responsible for the extensibility of the network to enable innovations that range from Annotations and Geo-Location to headers that can route support tickets for companies. There are over 100,000 applications leveraging the Twitter API, and we expect that to grow significantly with the expansion of the platform via Annotations in the coming months.
Our responsibilities extend from there. Twitter is responsible for the health, reliability, and scale of the network, Twitter-branded endpoints (SMS, a twitter client on the web and other most popular platforms, Twitter-branded widgets), a consistent user experience, and a sustaining revenue model for the platform. We will provide the best possible experience for each of these.
Ecosystem Clarity
We heard loud and clear at our Chirp Developer Conference last month that developers desire clarity—clarity about what we believe Twitter must provide, what Twitter looks to the ecosystem to provide, and where the lines, if any, are drawn. We have outlined above the services and responsibilities we will provide in the context of the platform. In order to provide further clarity to the ecosystem, we will also be specific about the boundaries we will draw in order to preserve the integrity, health, and value of the network.
We now employ over 200 people, and we plan to grow this investment as the opportunity demands. To sustain this investment, we have announced Promoted Tweets. These tweets will exist primarily in search and then in the timeline, but in a manner that preserves the integrity and relevance of the timeline. As we have announced, we will use innovative metrics like Resonance so that Promoted Tweets are only shown when they make sense for users and enhance the user experience.
As our primary concern is the long-term health and value of the network, we have and will continue to forgo near-term revenue opportunities in the service of carefully metering the impact of Promoted Tweets on the user experience. It is critical that the core experience of real-time introductions and information is protected for the user and with an eye toward long-term success for all advertisers, users and the Twitter ecosystem. For this reason, aside from Promoted Tweets, we will not allow any third party to inject paid tweets into a timeline on any service that leverages the Twitter API. We are updating our Terms of Service to articulate clearly what we mean by this statement, and we encourage you to read the updated API Terms of Service to be released shortly.
Why are we prohibiting these kinds of ads? First, third party ad networks are not necessarily looking to preserve the unique user experience Twitter has created. They may optimize for either market share or short-term revenue at the expense of the long-term health of the Twitter platform. For example, a third party ad network may seek to maximize ad impressions and click through rates even if it leads to a net decrease in Twitter use due to user dissatisfaction.
Secondly, the basis for building a lasting advertising network that benefits users should be innovation, not near-term monetization. Twitter is uniquely dependent on and responsible for the long-term health and value of the platform. Accordingly, a necessary focus of Promoted Tweets is to explore ways to create value for our users. Third party ad networks may be optimized for near-term monetization at the expense of innovating or creating the best user experience. We believe it is our responsibility to encourage creative product development and to curb practices that compromise innovation.
It is important to keep in mind that Twitter bears all the costs of maintaining the network, protecting the Tweet stream against spam, supporting user requests, and scaling the service. Indeed, Twitter will bear many of the support costs associated with any third-party paid Tweets, as Twitter receives support emails related to anything a user sees in a tweet stream. The third-party bears few of these costs by comparison.
Fostering Innovation
There has never been more opportunity for innovation on the Twitter platform than there is now. In order to continue to provide clarity, our guiding principles include:
1. We don't seek to control what users tweet. And users own their own tweets.
2. We believe there are opportunities to sell ads, build vertical applications, provide breakthrough analytics, and more. Companies are selling real-time display ads or other kinds of mobile ads around the timelines on many Twitter clients, and we derive no explicit value from those ads. That’s fine. We imagine there will be all sorts of other third-party monetization engines that crop up in the vicinity of the timeline.
3. We don’t believe we always need to participate in the myriad ways in which other companies monetize the network.
Platforms evolve. When Annotations ship, there are going to be many new business opportunities on the Twitter platform in addition to those currently available. We know that companies and entrepreneurs will create things with Annotations that we couldn’t have imagined. Companies will emerge that provide all manner of rich data and meta-data services around and in Tweets. Twitter clients could begin to differentiate on their ability to service different data-rich verticals like Finance or Entertainment. Media companies in the ecosystem can begin to incorporate rich tagging capabilities. Much has been written about the opportunities afforded by Annotations because those that understand the benefits of extensible architectures understand their power and potential.
We understand that for a few of these companies, the new Terms of Service prohibit activities in which they’ve invested time and money. We will continue to move as quickly as we can to deliver the Annotations capability to the market so that developers everywhere can create innovative new business solutions on the growing Twitter platform.
We hope that this clarity of purpose, focus, and roadmap helps point a clear way forward for the thousands of companies in the Twitter ecosystem.
Posted by @dickc at 8:05 AM
The Twitter Blog has a great post today on their core values and positioning. When taken in tandem with their announcement about blocking 3rd party ad streams, I think Twitter is working hard to differentiate themselves from both Facebook (whose privacy policy has been called into question) and Google, whose greedy ad-revenue focus should also be called out for what it is. Good stuff and glad to see Twitter taking this higher road.
Is Apple really evil?
Social media without a use case
The Medium - The Death of the Open Web - NYTimes.com
The far more significant development, however, is that many people are on their way to quitting the open Web entirely. That’s what the 50 million or so users of the iPhone and iPad are in position to do. By choosing machines that come to life only when tricked out with apps from the App Store, users of Apple’s radical mobile devices increasingly commit themselves to a more remote and inevitably antagonistic relationship with the Web.
Outstanding NY Times articles on the "closed web" and why it matters (in spite of what Google WANTS you to believe).

