August 28, 2006

Backpacking in Sequoia

I'm back from 3 days of backpacking in Sequoia National Park, and while it was pretty fun overall, I have been pretty tired all day. The original mission of the team was to tackle "Mount Brewer Loop", but thankfully we scaled that back after starting. I say "thankfully", because I found the hiking that we did on the first day to be extremely challenging, so I was thankful that we didn't go for the original, aggressive plan.

Anyways, the beauty and pristine state of this part of California is truly something to behold. It's amazing to think that this forrest probably looks roughly the same today, as it did when John Muir first explored it. While I still prefer modern comforts like my Macintosh and flush toilets, it is nice to get out of civilization once and awhile. It certainly gives a nice dose of perspective.

I have posted over 160 pictures from the trip in a gallery. Since that is quite a lot, I thought I would offer up a few highlights to those who are in a hurry:

Elizabeth has also posted her pictures online, so you can check those out as well.

-Andy.

[ Category: Happenings ] Posted by andyr at 6:45 PM

August 24, 2006

But wait, I actually DO agree with Microsoft on something!

Just so that there is some balance against my last post, Microsoft isn't all bad. I just read an Ars Technica story, where Microsoft is arguing that the modern worker requires unfiltered Internet access. I couldn't agree with Microsoft's point more. In fact, one of my reasons for leaving EDS (as I stated in my exit interview), is that I felt very strongly that I required fast, unflitered, and unmonitored Internet access in order to do my job effectively.

EDS, on the other hand, believes in putting all of their employees behind a proxy, that watches what you do, and blocks certain sites. This is wrong on so many levels - the primary being that the employee/employer relationship, at some point, has to be all about trust. Throughout the course of my employment at EDS, the company trusted me to do a good job, and do right by our customers. So, why couldn't they trust me to use my Internet connection properly as well?

I think that the line between "work time" and "personal time" has irrevocably blurred. I check my personal e-mail at work, and my work e-mail at home. So, why do some companies persist in trying to block "inappropriate" use of the corporate Internet connection? It boggles my mind, and is one of the many reasons why I'm happy that I don't work at such a closed-minded company anymore.

-Andy.

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[ Category: Work ] Posted by andyr at 7:01 PM

Yesterday was my last day at EDS - no joke

Well, after 3 years and 4 months, the era of Andy working at EDS is over. I had an extremely busy and jam-packed last day. In fact, I didn't end up leaving the office until a little after 10 PM. In my last two weeks at EDS, however, I think that I managed to get just about everything wrapped up -- be it documenting things, fixing things, migrating things, or simply deprecating things. At least, I hope that I did a good job. If I get a lot of angry phone calls over the course of the next few weeks, then I guess I'l think differently.

On my way out of the office, I also left my co-workers a little gag in my cube:

Windows Server 2003 - I Love it!!

The joke being, of course, that I am really pretty anti-Microsoft these days (and everyone who knows me at EDS probably knows this fact). Truth be told, however, I wasn't always like this. In fact, when I joined EDS, I was still fairly "Microsoft agnostic". However, seeing all of the blind allegiance to Microsoft, and the continued insecurity of Windows, pushed me into the anti-MS camp. But somehow, before that happened, I ended up with a promotional copy of Windows Server 2003. I had forgotten about it, but found it buried in a desk drawer yesterday while cleaning it out.

Anyways, I'm about to head out on a weekend-long camping trip with Mike and Sheila, so I hope to write more when I get back next week.

-Andy.

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[ Category: Work ] Posted by andyr at 6:37 PM | Comments (2)

August 17, 2006

Is that a certain pop-punk band that I see?

On another of my "random surfs", and I came across this picture on a game-related blog, which I thought was pretty funny:

Fall Out Boy, Nintendo style

What's funny, is that the blogger who found this picture didn't seem to recognize the subjects. But I think that I do, and it clearly looks like the boys from Fall Out Boy. I'll have to ask Herr Roommate where this picture is actually from.

-Andy.

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[ Category: Music ] Posted by andyr at 10:18 PM

August 16, 2006

Apple: Looking backwards in order to look forwards

Last night, I got side-tracked from my normal web surfing and blogging habits, when I came across the infamous Steve Jobs keynote at MacWorld Boston in 1997. This speech was apparently delivered at a time when Apple's outlook was at its lowest ebb, and just weeks after Steve returned to Apple. What is amazing about this speech is how Steve Jobs lays out how he is going to turn around Apple, in very simple terms. And then, over the course of the next 9 years, he and his team at Apple did everything that he said that they were going to do (and more), and now Apple is positively resurgent.

There are a couple of amazing things about this speech. The first is the amount of vision displayed by Steve Jobs. Apple isn't the only computer company to be faced with the challenge of changing market dynamics that threatened their relevance. The computing industry is littered with the husks of failed companies that went to the market with the wrong strategy. SGI, for example, had the same sort of crisis that Apple did. They decided to go from selling MIPS-based workstations running their own proprietary from of UNIX (called IRIX) to selling Intel-based workstations running Windows NT. While the analysts of the time applauded the move, it was clearly the wrong strategy - as now SGI is a shadow of its former self.

Steve Jobs, on the other hand, correctly determined that one of Apple's core assets was its proprietary operating system, MacOS. During the speech, he stated that Apple was going to invest tremendously in the MacOS, a move which seemed to defy "conventional" wisdom[1]. Yet, once again, what separates Steve Jobs from a lot of other CEOs is that he posses a combination of technological and business understanding. Thus, he made the right decision.

A decision, by the way, which stands to this day. I was really impressed with the amount of work that I saw going into Mac OS X at WWDC. Apple is continuing to make Mac OS X better by leaps and bounds. Most of the "good stuff" that we have seen so far in Leopard are things that are more "behind the scenes" - new APIs and hooks for developers writing third party applications. Things that make the platform richer for developers, and therefore for their end users.

The other amazing thing about the speech is that it is one of the few times that I have seen Steve Jobs get flat-out booed by the Apple faithful. It happened a few times, most impressively when he announced Apple's partnership with Microsoft ("the enemy"). This shows another important characteristic of what has made Steve Jobs so instrumental in Apple's revival -- he's not afraid to step on people's toes. In this case, he knew that the right course for Apple was to work together with Microsoft. But he also knew, that the Apple faithful (who had really been supporting Apple during the "dark days") weren't going to like it. Yet, her persevered, and the rest is history.

Interestingly, Microsoft must have really made out on that deal. The $150 million that they invested was in Apple in the form of stock, which they had to hold for three years. In August of 1997, Apple's stock was worth around $18 per share. Three years later, the stock was at nearly $50 per share, after a 2-for-1 split! So, if Microsoft sold the stock in 2000, it means that they made over $450 million of pure profit. And they continued selling Office for the Mac at a profit. And lastly, they have been essentially using Apple as outside R&D - as the latest version of Windows, Vista, appears to be heavily influenced by Mac OS X.

So, while the popular theory is that convincing Microsoft to invest in Apple was a coup for Steve Jobs, I think it was really a coup for both companies. It continually amazes me, when I think about this, how what's important for a company isn't simply vision, but what matters is having the right vision. I think that far too often, this sort of vision is lacking at most major companies (and possibly also governments). That is what makes following Apple so interesting. And it is also why if you are in business school, you positively owe it to yourself to study this case example. It's amazing.

-Andy.


  1. The Wired article that I referenced, "101 Ways to Save Apple", is also fairly interesting in its own right. It is amazing how many of the 101 things are flat-out wrong, and that the Apple-under-Steve-Jobs thankfully ignored. This article is one of my classic examples of how the pundits and analysts are almost always wrong.

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[ Category: Apple Inc. ] Posted by andyr at 12:54 AM | Comments (2)

August 9, 2006

WWDC06: Integrated graphics on the Intel XServe

Over in the IT lab, they have one of the new Intel-based XServes on display. I managed to snap a few photos, including one of the back of the server. It seems like there is now a graphics controller integrated with the motherboard, as evidenced by the mini-DVI port on the back:

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Even though this machine had a PCI-E graphics card installed, you don't need to do this if you just want something simple for administering the machine.

-Andy.

[ Category: Apple Inc. ] Posted by andyr at 2:31 PM

WWDC06: More signage

This banner is hanging up on the first floor of Moscone:

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Apple's marketing really knows how to thumb their nose at Microsoft, while simultaneously stoking the Mac faithful.

-Andy.

[ Category: Apple Inc. ] Posted by andyr at 2:29 PM

August 8, 2006

WWDC06: Day One Wrapup

A combination of little sleep and getting "blasted with the information firehose" means that I am extremely tired right now. Tired, but satisfied. Will and I managed to get pretty close to the stage for the keynote - we were slightly right of center, and less than 15 rows away. And while the format of this year's keynote was a little odd (lots of speakers divvied up the work), I am pleased with what Apple announced. With the new Mac Pro, Apple has not only fixed a number of classic gripes with the old G5-based Power Mac, but they also appear to be providing some decent value to boot. While the comparison with Dell that Phil Schiller made in the keynote wasn't totally above board (the Dell was configured with a super-expensive graphics card -- shame on you Apple), it seems like Apple's new Mac Pro is going to be cheaper than a similarly priced Dell. And that is pretty amazing, when you think about it.

I am running the Leopard Developer Preview on my PowerBook right now, and at this stage, the amount of change over Tiger is fairly subtle. As Steve Jobs said in the keynote - Apple is doing things a bit differently this year, and keeping some of the upcoming features of Leopard close to their chest. So, I suspect that when we do finally get the final build of Leopard, things are going to be quite a bit different than the Developer Preview.

-Andy.

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[ Category: Apple Inc. ] Posted by andyr at 10:09 AM

August 7, 2006

WWDC06: VMWare running on Mac OS X

After lunch yesterday, Will and I wandered into S.F. to find the hotel suite where VMWare was demonstrating their upcoming Mac OS X release:

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In the above photo, you can see VMWare running Windows XP inside of a VM running on a Mac mini. The VMWare demo that we saw appeared to have pretty amazing USB support - in the screenshot you can see iTunes connected to an attached iPod, and a logitec USB camera displaying a live video feed. In addition, the VMWare VM can expose the two cores of a Core Duo chip into the virutalized operating system - so Windows XP actually saw two processors.

It didn't look like much has been done in the way of UI work -- they weren't able to show me any UIs for configuring VMs or building new ones. The VMWare representatives did say that they were going to do everything in Cocoa, fortunately.

All-in-all, an impressive demo, but the jury is still out in terms of when this is going to come out (not until 2007, it seems), and how much its going to cost (currently, VMWare workstation goes for $200).

-Andy.

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[ Category: Apple Inc. ] Posted by andyr at 11:09 PM

WWDC06: The one really bad thing

Apple has these signs posted all around the conference hall:

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Of course, while I see Apple's point, and I'm going to do my best to respect their wishes, I think that this policy is extremely stupid. Apple needs to get the word out about their platform, and how great it is. And any little thing that can be done to help -- posting information on blogs, discussion forums, mailing lists, etc. can only help Apple in their quest to keep the Mac OS X platform relevant.

-Andy.

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[ Category: Apple Inc. ] Posted by andyr at 11:07 PM | Comments (1)

WWDC06: Steve Jobs, at the beginning of the big keynote

As you can see, I had a pretty darn good seat for this morning's keynote:

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-Andy.

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[ Category: Apple Inc. ] Posted by andyr at 6:16 PM

WWDC06: That's one big Apple logo

I shot this on my way to Moscone West this morning:

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Wow.

-Andy.

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[ Category: Apple Inc. ] Posted by andyr at 6:10 PM | Comments (1)

And in other news...

A long, long time ago, I made reference to the fact that I was working on two projects. One of which, I could talk about (Mario Kart), and the other, which I couldn't. Well, I am happy to announce that I can finally talk about the other project that I have been working on.

I have found a new job, and I have quit EDS.

It has been a long, sometimes arduous road in between when I decided to leave EDS (October of 2005) and now. I have gone down a lot of false trails, applied to a ton of jobs, and generally performed a very exhaustive search. It is too bad that I couldn't blog about all of the pit-falls and wrong turns -- because I think it could have made for rather interesting reading.

Nevertheless, the capsule summary is that the job market (at least in the Bay Area) is doing pretty well -- I was almost never at a loss for interesting jobs to apply to. However, it is also quite competitive - companies are still being very picky with who the bring onboard. But, the bottom line is that things today are nowhere near as bad as the job market was in 2002.

Anyways, I'm pretty scared/intimidated/excited/anxious. I am definitely doing what I need to be doing, and shaking things up, and introducing a fair amount of change into my life. However, while I know that change is ultimately good for me, that doesn't mean that I necessarily like going through it. I should be in for a pretty interesting couple of months, when I start my new job in early September.

-Andy.

[ Category: Life ] Posted by andyr at 7:33 AM | Comments (3)

At WWDC06 this week

I was going to blog about this awhile ago, but I'm going to be at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in San Francisco all this week. I have been wanting to go forever, so this year I finally decided to send myself, rather than waiting until I was employed somewhere more Mac-friendly. I'm hoping for a lot of cool announcements today, and to learn a lot about how to code for the Mac.

-Andy.

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[ Category: Apple Inc. ] Posted by andyr at 7:17 AM