Mon - September 13, 2004

TechBytes new home


Well, I think I have successfully made the transition to TypePad. Hopefully, TechBytes will live there happily for the next few years.

If you are using the XML feed for TechBytes, you need to subscribe to this feed in order to keep reading TechBytes.

I finally got the jasonball.com domain issues worked out so clicking here or typing www.jasonball.com into your browser will take you to the latest version of TechBytes.

See you there.

Posted at 09:10 PM    

Wed - September 8, 2004

Migrating to TypePad


I have been working on a new version of TechBytes over on TypePad.

I have decided that this will most likely be my last year with .Crap (my affectionate name for .Mac). Unless Apple can actually offer something that resembles value for my money, I'm going to drop the service. .Mac is, in a word, pitiful. Maintaining a website on .Mac has been difficult at best, with sporadic outages and unexpected behavior from the service.

So, come by and visit my public beta of TechBytes at it's new home on TypePad's servers. I still have a few kinks to work out, but it's 95% finished. I am having some problems with Network Solutions and getting my domain (jasonball.com) mapped correctly for the TypePad version of TechBytes, but nothing major.


Posted at 04:42 PM    

Fri - August 27, 2004

Airport Express


I finally received my Airport Express today. Set up was a snap, even with my lackluster BT service. (I'm using the Hermstedt XDSL modem as well, which has also made my life a lot easier.)

The most impressive aspect of the Airport Express is the size, as you can see from the picture. It's basically the same size as the power adapter for my PowerBook.



Apple has done an excellent job with the Airport Express. Connecting my printer, an HP Laserjet 1010, was a matter of clicks as well, even though it is not listed on the Airport Express compatibility chart. Connecting my stereo was equally as simple.

I purchased a Netgear base station last Christmas and it continually dropped the signal and needed to be restarted. It was also a pain in the neck to set up.

Five stars for the Airport Express- I highly recommend it.

(A bigger picture of the AC adapter/Airport Express is available at my Beta TechBytes site on TypePad)

Posted at 10:15 AM    

Thu - August 26, 2004

ESADE Rankings


I've been getting asked a lot lately where ESADE ranks on the Business School tables. Just for the record, The Wall Street Journal ranked ESADE as the #2 International School for 2003.

(I don't put a whole lot of stock in these rankings, because they vary so widely between sources...and business school is only worth the network you build anyway. Real learning, at least in my opinion, doesn't happen in an MBA classroom.)

Posted at 02:56 PM    

Thu - August 19, 2004

London Olympics




If you live in London, or simply want to support London, go register here to back the bid for hosting the olympics in London in 2012.

Posted at 07:40 AM    

Thu - August 12, 2004

Mobileway and Inphomatch Merge


It's a little disappointing to see that Mobileway has only been EBITDA profitable, while similar companies in Europe have been anywhere from profitable to "wildy profitable". That being the case, I can see where this type of integration could provide clear advantages and cost savings, my only doubt is where they will go next. At $120 million in revenue, they will be worth watching. Via Venturewire

Posted at 03:07 PM    

Wed - August 4, 2004

Storage wants to be free


There's a nice new service out there called Streamload . This would solve *many* of my current file storage and distribution problems.

"SEND.  RECEIVE.  ACCESS.  STORE.

You have the power to control your files anywhere, anytime. Fast, unlimited, inexpensive, this is the power of the internet used for your convenience — for your needs — for your demanding lifestyle. This is the power of Streamload. Life without limits."

One interesting twist is that you get 10GB of storage FREE. Your pricing plan is based on how much you download per month. For an offsite backup solution, the $4.95/month gives you 10GB of storage and 2GB of downloads per month. If you want to be able to upload and download the full 10GB it's only $9.95 per month.

(That beats the pants off of Apple's $100 per year for a paltry 100MB of online storage. Even my USB flash drive offers more storage than that.)

This is very similar to the type of service that I posted over at my ipod blog a few weeks ago saying that Apple needed to introduce...

Here's to innovative companies making Apple look like Microsoft. Well, even Microsoft is looking better than Apple these days as far as online services are concerned ... (see rant below)

Posted at 10:31 AM    

Tue - August 3, 2004

.Mac Feedback email


This is a copy of an email I sent Apple earlier today:

Dear .Mac Team,

It's been slow on the .Mac improvement front lately, except for the pretty facelift. My email still loses sent emails, and I have not received any response regarding that after 2 months. It only took 3 months to resolve an issue with iSync that was on the server side. Not bad for $100 a year.

I've pasted below a very friendly email from Microsoft regarding my free Hotmail account. I hope to see some improvement in .Mac soon. Renewal time is approaching you know...

For once, I wish .Mac would actually pull through and offer something resembling value for my money instead of expecting me to prop up Apple's stock price by shoveling sub-par services to the Mac faithful.

Jason

"Dear MSN® Hotmail® Member:

As a valued MSN Hotmail Member, you will receive your storage upgrade automatically in the coming days. Over the month of August we will upgrade the storage capacity of your e-mail account to 250 MB - that's 125 times your current storage limit! We will also increase your attachment size from 1MB to 10MB. This means you will be able to store and attach more than ever and it's free!

But that's not all.

Last month, we upgraded your e-mail account's anti-virus protection. This makes MSN Hotmail, the only free global e-mail service that both scans and cleans incoming and outgoing email for viruses and worms.


We'd like to thank you for being a valued MSN Hotmail Member and look forward to telling you about even more exciting changes to your Hotmail e-mail account in the coming months. In the meantime, we hope you enjoy your new larger inbox!

Thank you,

MSN Hotmail Member Services"

Posted at 12:42 PM    

Fri - July 30, 2004

Wi-Fi'd Gas and Water


"The City of Corpus Christi, Texas, will deploy Wi-Fi system for use by the city-owned water and gas utilities, public works departments, and public safety agencies.

The Tropos Wi-Fi system will provide an automated gas and water meter reading twice per day from all meters in the coverage area. By eliminating the need for utility personnel to visit each meter and manually record customer consumption, the city can more quickly and accurately provide up-to-date billing information to their service recipients. Moreover, customers can access real-time usage data through a Web-based billing and information system automatically updated with each wireless meter polling.

The network will also be available for use by city public works crews, as well as Police and Fire Departments. The city plans to operate GPS-based asset and vehicle tracking applications over the Wi-Fi network, increasing both officer and community safety." Via We make money not art

This looks very similar to a business I was looking at about one year ago and thought it was a very compelling idea. All those Wi-Fi meters would literally have created a blanket of connectivity over the city... Gas & Water meter reading plus wireless connectivity for laptops and Wi-Fi enabled phones. Apparently quite a few other VCs thought it was compelling as well...

Posted at 09:10 AM    

Thu - July 29, 2004

To License or Not to License, That is the Question


A recent article on CNN regarding Real's reverse engineering of Apple's FairPlay points out:

"Harmony (Real's product) could help iPod sales," says Charlie Wolf, an analyst with Needham & Co. "It could also take some sales away from the iTunes store, but it's the iPod that makes the money." "They need [an answer] that doesn't sound anti-consumer and yet preserves the system they've built for themselves," Bernoff says. "I can't think of a response that satisfies both of those requirements."

Well, I certainly I can.

1. Ignore Real.
2. Make FairPlay and the iTunes Music Store better.
3. License FairPlay.

Ignore them like the fly they are: small, but annoying. Apple needs to focus on making iTunes and the iPod better. As a result, FairPlay (and the iPod) will be updated and changed over the course of time. Since Real's Harmony is essentially a reverse-engineered hack, it will break and songs purchased through Real will no longer work on iPods.

By licensing FairPlay to other parties, say in six months time, if Real decides to continue to provide music using their "hack", they are the ones that will end up looking incredibly stupid and cheap for not licensing FairPlay from Apple. The iTunes music store has always been a loss-leader (or break-even leader) for Apple, and I agree that having a variety of ways to buy music for my Mac and iPod is a good thing. Apple is obviously aggressively expanding its iPod World Domination to phones and PCs, and a licensing/SDK could open up new distribution and revenue opportunities for Apple and others (such as buying and downloading songs via 3G or Wap portals on those fancy new Motorola phones from Orange, Vodafone, Verizon,etc.).

Apple legal is probably itching to deliver a cease and desist order, but I think that might backfire. By using this three-step plan Apple takes the moral high-road, increases the attractiveness of the iPod to customers, increases revenue and expands the iPod/iTunes ecosystem. It's a clear winner for everyone but Real.

Posted at 08:31 AM