WordPress 2.5

WordPress 2.5 was released over the weekend ! Super exciting and the feedback has been really positive. Check out the coverage on techmeme, and also be sure to visit WordPress.org which has also undergone a redesign thanks to Matt Thomas.

WordPress 2.5 has many new features including a one-click gallery function that is sure to be a big hit. Matt Mullenweg did a quick screencast showing this feature:
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For full details head over to the announcement post on WordPress.org.

Dash Express – Innovative In-Car GPS

I love in-car GPS, and rely on it so much that when I recently drove in someone else’s car that didn’t have GPS I got that same strange feeling you get when you leave home without your mobile phone — oh the horror !

Back in October 2007 I wrote about what I hoped to see happening with in-car GPS and also posted my review of the Garmin Nuvi 350 and what was missing, including:

– No easy way to transfer address info from my desktop machine to the device.
– Needs to be two way. The other day I had it find the nearest gas station and it found a 7-11 store that had no gas station
– More two-way options. Would be nice to have the ability to sync all the data back to the web, so I could review past trips, and mark places of interest for future trips.
– More sharing. Would be cool to see (anonymously) what were the most effective routes to take at certain hours based on what other people did, the most scenic, the one with the least amount of traffic, etc. Lots can be done in this area.

So I’m excited to see that a majority of my wish-list items and the big traffic p2p feature are all present in the new Dash Express that Kara Swisher just reviewed:

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Walt Mossberg also has an in-depth review and concludes:

Dash Express finally brings the power of the Internet, and of community information, to auto navigation. If it becomes popular, it could be a big deal.

The Dash Express traffic feature is using a wisdom of the crowd type approach:

Dash approaches traffic in an entirely different way – by collecting information from other people driving real commute routes, during real commute times. Each Dash Express anonymously and automatically sends its position and speed back to Dash’s servers. The servers then update all of the other Dash devices in the area with current road speeds, providing the most up-to-date traffic information available. The larger the Dash Network grows, the better traffic information becomes.

I think this will be a big seller and we could see lots of interesting mashups happening. Think playlists for GPS. So you could export the top rated coffee shops in SF from Yelp, and have that be a shareable list that anyone could download to their Dash. In Kara’s video above she plugs in a list that has all the hot spots from Entourage in LA — very cool.

Dash Express is being sold exclusively on Amazon for $400.

Stuff White People Like #91: San Francisco

One of the fastest growing, and funniest, blogs on WordPress.com is Stuff White People Like.

I cracked up this morning when I read this latest post on “San Francisco“:

Though it is exceptionally easy to put someone from San Francisco in a good mood, there are some caveats. When talking to a white person who lives in San Francisco, it is best not to bring up New York City. Though they live in a world class city, San Franciscans have a crippling inferiority complex about New York and even hinting at that will make them very sad or very defensive.

πŸ™‚

Read the whole post here

World Water Day

It’s World Water Day today March 22nd, 2008.

I was in the car on Friday and listened to NPR’s Science Friday where the topic was “water”. One of the guests on the show was Lester R. Brown, the author of Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization – which can be read free online:

β€œPlan B 3.0 is a comprehensive plan for reversing the trends that are fast undermining our future. Its four overriding goals are to stabilize climate, stabilize population, eradicate poverty, and restore the earth’s damaged ecosystems,” says Brown. β€œFailure to reach any one of these goals will likely mean failure to reach the others as well.”

Lester and the other guests brought up a few points that were really interesting to me:

1) Bottled water is having a very negative impact on our water supplies. A single bottle of water requires 4 bottles of water to produce, plus energy to transport it, and the vast majority of the plastic never gets recycled – it simply ends up in a landfill. I stopped drinking bottled water a few years ago and with the exception of this recent drugs-in-the-tap-water , i feel like tap water is safer and even tastes better.

2) Our water infrastructure in many populated areas is 100+ years old. New York, for example, has major water-ways/canals/pipes that leak out close to 40% of the water before it arrives at the destination.

3) In California, the transportation of water ( mainly through pipes and pumps ) consumes 15% of the State’s total energy usage.

4) Israel has always been way ahead on water management and irrigation due to smart tech companies and a generally dry climate. One innovative trend that has been happening is to look at water as a factor in other commodities. One such commodity is grain, where Israel has shifted to importing close to 90% of it’s grain since the production of it in Israel required so much water. Only a few decades ago nearly all the grain was produced locally.

5) Water – a bit like oil – isn’t currently allowed to be priced according to market forces here in the US. Energy costs are not factored in, and agricultural subsidies keep the real price artificially low. What that means is that technologies out there for desalination, and cleaning of other”gray” water are still seen as too expensive. It also means infrastructure doesn’t get investment, and other products that use water don’t have true costs associated with them.

Will be interesting to see if this waster issue becomes a hot one in the fall election cycle. I know the NYTIMES Mag cover, “The Future is Drying Up”, back in October 2007 did get a lot of good coverage.

Party

We co-hosted a party Tuesday night in NYC along with The New York Times, Sphere, Hearst Interactive, GigaOM and True Ventures.

The idea was to bring together lots of various media companies, both traditional and new — and talk about tech, web2.0, publishing, and all the great activity happening in our space.

The venue was a perfect symbol of the blending on traditional and new, the recently redesigned Hearst building on 57th & 8th ave, with one of the best views I’ve seen in New York – an unobstructed view of central park.

Big thanks to everyone involved especially Shea Di Donna who as always makes it all happen like magic !

It was great to see lots of familiar face including Jason Schaeffer of CNNMoney, Lindsay Campbell of MobLogic.tv, Jamie Thingelstad of Dow Jones, Adam Embick of Sphere, Kelly Leach of Dow Jones, Jon Friedman of MarketWatch, Andrew Madden of Google, Josh Macht of HBR, Karen Saltser of Real Simple, Scott Kurnit, Jeff Misenti of Fox News, Ken Marcus of CondeNet, Tim Morrison of TIME.com, and Christine Mohan of Dow Jones & allthingsD.

Jason Calcanis was also there and captured some video via his Qik.com mobile hookup, and Jamie Thingelstad and Josh Guttman of Sphere also captured a few photos.

Great event and always fun to be back in New York.

Picnik and Animoto: Photo Editing and Slideshows in the Cloud:

It really does feel that most applications are moving to the “cloud” especially in publishing and email.

The other category of applications that is undergoing this transformation, in my opinion, appears to be photo editing.

Picnik
I’ve been using the web-based Picnik for a few months now to do what I had previously done with Photoshop and iPhoto — essentially light editing, cropping, resizing, and image size optimization. Picnik also includes some nice touches for framing photos and inserting text and other objects as well as mimicking some of the popular Photoshop filters/plugins. Like Flickr, Picnik had a limited free version and a full featured paid version. Only two weeks after I paid for the full version, Picnik switched to a nearly all free ad-supported model πŸ™‚ But it was worth the $20 at the time.

conclusion: The best online photo editor I’ve used, and it’s allowed me to nearly stop using Photoshop. The integration with Flickr also makes it easy to save directly back to Flickr and not need to re-upload. It’s basically free, so check it out. The Picnik blog is here, powered by WordPress πŸ™‚

Animoto
Animoto is also an interesting web service. It creates music video style montages from your collections of photos. You can upload your own images or hook into flickr and other photo services to pull out the images. You add your own MP3 or one of their supplied tracks, and within a few minutes it created a pretty cool video. The free version is limited to 30 seconds, and the paid upgrade allows for videos of any length. Apparently their paid upgrade conversion has been very good — I haven’t made the move yet.

conclusion: Pretty cool overall, and worth trying out the 30 second free version. I personally like the slideshows that iPhoto creates, and find the Flickr slideshows to be too basic and not inclusive of music. My ideal setup would be to have something like this built into Flickr. The Animoto blog is here, hosted on WordPress.com πŸ™‚

Below is an animoto video I just did with a few photos I took in Hong Kong:
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The bottom line — this is a real trend. It definitely also points out the need for real broadband connectivity, especially on the upload side to make these services compelling and “snappy”. Luckily I just got a small speed boost, but could definitely use a bit more.

Bear Stearns News and the Role of Economic Models and Predicitions

Pretty dramatic news tonight that JP Morgan has acquired Bear Stearns. After Bear Stearns was trading in the 90s just a few months ago, this sale represents a purchase by JPM at a $2/share price — wow !

[ Begin Rant ]

Right after I read that, I saw an article in the FT, that Alan Greenspan thinks our financial models were partly at fault for this housing / loan crisis, and that better statistical models & better data in the future will help improve the stability of our markets (although he acknowledges that we’ll “never have a perfect model of risk”):

The most credible explanation of why risk management based on state-of-the-art statistical models can perform so poorly is that the underlying data used to estimate a model’s structure are drawn generally from both periods of euphoria and periods of fear, that is, from regimes with importantly different dynamics.

If we could adequately model each phase of the cycle separately and divine the signals that tell us when the shift in regimes is about to occur, risk management systems would be improved significantly

Greenspan is obviously a guru and a huge figure of our time — Bob Rubin’s book that I read a few years ago, In an Uncertain World: Tough Choices from Wall Street to Washington, had some great insights into how Greenspan operates.

But this general idea that better models are the solution strikes me as counter intuitive. There is a whole debate in certain quarters about economics being a hard or soft science — that is, is it closer to psychology and philosophy (soft – about trends / ideas / different for each person or situation – no less important a science, but not about injecting repeatable test-driven methodologies) or closer to math and physics (hard – repeatable tests, about math & data, etc). I tend to think it’s a softer science for a few reasons:

1) With nearly every economic model there is an underlying assumption that people will act in an economically rational way. That they will maximize their economic situation. We simply know this to not be the case. People overspend, overreach, and are easily manipulated into doing things that are absolutely not economically rational. Having a killer sound system in a beat-up broken down car is just one example πŸ™‚ Investing money in the markets while carrying high interest credit card debt is another common and simple example of not being economically rational.

2) If somehow you could build a model that took in every data point, you would need infinite data points. You would need to model in the probability of a new york sports team winning and how that will impact $$ spent in bars in NYC, and will therefor impact real estate in the east village. Just seems out of our current reach — the perfect model needs to encompass the entire real world.

3) Economic models on future events have been mostly wrong, and continue to be wrong – regardless of source – government & private sector. Stock pickers tend to be wrong over the long run, as index funds have been shown to do much better. Basically the finance experts who have tons of resources, sophisticated models, and 100% focus have a pretty bad hitting average. A friend of mine works in energy and told me that all the economic and financial prediction models that are put out are basically useless to his trading strategy & that I should look up up oil price estimates from the major banks in 2006. A quick google search and I found this from a top 3 bank:

We have increased our projection for prices of crude oil (WTI) for 2006 and 2007 from $50.00/bbl to $57.50/bbl and $45.00/bbl to $55.00/bbl, respectively.

Not even close — we are well over $110 today for WTI

I don’t necessarily have the answers on how to do it better — but it’s worth looking at the track record of the experts and perhaps not being as surprised when they get everything wrong and their models fail to predict the outcomes that we see.

But to me the inspiring part of this situation is that the US is the best positioned economy to deal with any challenges that lie ahead. In the US companies fail fast (the whole JP Morgan deal took 3 days basically over a weekend ). By failing fast and dealing with it, reallocation of capital can happen efficiently and expeditiously. Other economies are saddled with slow processes that keep failing companies on life support for years and actually suck energy out of the economy and prevent smart people from going to work for companies that should be thriving.

[ End Rant ]

Then again — I could be totally wrong πŸ™‚ I’m also influenced right now by a book I just started reading the other day, The Black Swan, that takes a very similar line towards economic models and predictions. I’ll write up a few thoughts on that book soon.

Comcast “Blast”

I guess I got spoiled when I lived in Brooklyn and had a fairly fast internet connection using Cablevision’s Optimium Online Boost service. It delivered 30 megs down and 5 megs up (link).

When I moved to San Francisco I expected something even better, but instead was only able to signup with Comcast’s 6 megs down / 768K up service.

So when Comcast upped the offering ( for an additional $10/month ) to 15 Mbps / 2 Mbps I signed up. And according to this speedtest I’m getting pretty close to what I should be seeing:

speedtest.png

Hopefully we’ll catch up soon with countries like South Korea that offer 100Mbps connections at half the cost – we rank #14th currently. I also hear Verizon Fios will be available in my area soon — and offers 25Mbps up/down. AT&T is also expected to up their DSL offering. And lastly I could choose my next apartment based on where web-pass is setup – they offer 45 megabit synchronous connections at select apartment complexes in SF πŸ™‚