Blog

Sack the Editor, Please

I read the Bits section of the New York Times every day. I like that they lag behind the minute-by-minute tech news, and take the time to write what are generally “big picture” articles toward the end of a news day. However, I’m seeing more and more sloppy copy editing and generally bad journalism over there. I have to think it’s because Bits is technically a “blog” from the Times, but come on. You’re still the New York Times, and I expect a certain level of writing proficiency.

This recent article really got me going. It’s a fluff piece to begin with; oh boy, there goes that crazy Steve Jobs shooting his mouth off again. But what’s worse is the middle school-level writing. To that end (paying respectful homage to The Detritus Review) let’s read Miguel Helft’s gem together. Blue is the article, red is me.

Update: The article has been updated since I first posted this. The most egregious English errors have been corrected. Notably, “dissed” has also been replaced. This all seems to suggest that The New York Times has a “post now, edit later” policy, which still disturbs me. It disturbs me more that they hire writers who don’t know the difference between “too” and “to.”

Steve Jobs: Our Approach is Better Than Google’s

On Monday, I wrote an article about the competition between Apple’s iPhone and smartphones running Google’s Android. The article discussed some of the advantages and disadvantages of Apple’s vertically-integrated and closed approach and Android’s more open strategy.

A little biased, a few too many strung-together clauses, but I get where you’re going with this, I think.

It concluded by quoting experts and analysts saying that while Android, and perhaps other systems, are likely to do well, Apple has little reason to worry.

Apple declined to comment for the story. But on Monday, Steven P. Jobs, Apple’s chief executive, took time to address the issue during the company’s fourth quarter earnings conference call.

Ah, so this is an I-told-you-so. I see what you did there! You get a pat on the back for that one, Miguel!

This was unusual, as Mr. Jobs doesn’t typically participate in the company’s earnings calls. But Mr. Jobs said he couldn’t pass the opportunity to drop in for Apple’s first $20 billion quarter.

Mr. Jobs stared by pointing out that Apple sold 14.1 million iPhones during the quarter, a 91 percent surge from a year earlier. Apple sold those smartphones at an even faster pace than the overall market for smartphones.

The “even” in this sentence implies that this is unexpected. I fail to see how this is remarkable, since you’d expect any company beating its competition to fall into this category.

Then he made an impassioned attack on Android and forceful defense of Apple.

“In reality, we think the open versus closed argument is just a smokescreen to try to hide the real issue, which is what’s best for the customer: Fragmented versus integrated,” Mr. Jobs said. “We think Android is very, very fragmented and becoming more fragmented by the day.”

Mr. Jobs noted that major Android manufacturers like HTC and Motorola put their own user interfaces on their devices and that different versions of the operating system with different capabilities are built into different devices, causing headaches for both consumers and application developers. Mr. Jobs said that Android sometimes left users to be the “system integrators.”

Interesting, provocative quotation. I assume you’re going to clarify what Mr. Jobs means by that, right?

“We think this is a huge strength of our approach compared to Google’s,” Mr. Jobs said. “When selling to users who want their devices to just work, we believe integrated will trump fragmented every time.”

Oh, guess not. The “system integrators” part did sound very official and intimidating though. That must be bad for consumers.

Then he added: “We are very committed to the integrated approach, no matter how many times Google tries to characterize it as closed,” he said. “We are confident that it will triumph over Google’s fragmented approach ,[sic] no matter how many times Google tries to characterize it as open.”

Mr. Jobs wasn’t just dissing Google.

The New York Times is now accepting “dissing?”

With a bit less passion, and perhaps a touch of disdain…

So, less passionate, but more disdainful. I’m with you. I think.

With a bit less passion, and perhaps a touch of disdain, he also dismissed Research in Motion, the maker of the BlackBerry.

Oh! That’s what “dissed” means! I wouldn’t know, because I’ve never seen that word printed in the New York Times!

Mr. Jobs noted that the iPhone had beat the BlackBerry…

Clearly no need for a participle there.

Mr. Jobs noted that the iPhone had beat the BlackBerry, which sold 12.1 million handsets in the most recent quarter. “We now passed RIM and I don’t don’t’[sic]see them catching us in the foreseeable future,” he said.

Actually, he didn’t say that. Close, though.

Mr. Jobs said that RIM was now forced to move beyond its comfort zone and attempt to become a software platform.

Right, it’s not like they have their own mobile OS or anything. Sillies!

“RIM has a high mountain a head of them to climb,” he said.

The New York Times: illiterate, or sloppily using text-to-speech software to write blog posts?

Mr. Jobs also had a word about those who want to compete with the iPad in tablets.

As opposed to competing with the iPad in, say, a vat of Jell-O.

He said that while many in the media have said that…

Whoa, did you just say that they just said that some reporters just said–oh, forget it. Someone said whatever you’re about to say.

He said that while many in the media have said that an “avalanche” of tablets are [sic]expected to compete with the iPad soon, he believes only a handful of tablets will be released this year.

Maybe this is splitting hairs, but competing with the iPad and simply being released aren’t really the same thing. But I guess we’ll table that for next week and focus on basic grammar and syntax for now.

He said all are Android-based tablets and are only 7 inches,

Me talk good when talk about tablet and are good with the words.

He said all are Android-based tablets and are only 7 inches, far smaller than the iPad’s 9.7 inch size.

(But really, it’s what you do with it that counts.)

A 7-inch screen, he said, is only 45 percent as big as a 9.7-inch screen, and Apple’s user testing has shown that is too small for a usable tablet.

Uh… huh. You mean it has only 45 percent the area of a 9.7-inch screen, right? Because 7 is 72 percent of 9.7.

“The 7 inch tables are tweeners…

The tables are tweeners? Where did the tables come from? And what’s a tweener?

…to big to compete…

Probably a simple typo. We all do it.

…to big to compete with a smartphone and to small to compete with an iPad,”…

Never mind, must be idiocy after all.

…Mr. Jobs said. Lest there be any doubts about his confidence, he added: “The current crop of 7-inch tablets will be D.O.A.: Dead on arrival.”

And so was the editor, apparently.

Lesson Learned

For those of you who may recently have been met with an obscene (and terribly-designed) spam page, or a static “under contruction” page here, my apologies.  This site was hacked over the weekend, and it took some time to get it back in order.  I can’t yet say for certain it won’t come back to bite me again, but I have taken measures to prevent it from ocurring again.

A big thank you to Bluehost, whose tech support seems to get even better every time I call up.  I’m never on hold very long, and every tech I’ve ever spoken to there has been helpful, knowledgeable, and generally intelligent.  And thank God they keep backups, because I would’ve been in real trouble without them.

In that vein, just a quick PSA.  If you’re running a WordPress-powered site, make sure to a) always keep a backup of both your WordPress directory and database, and b) always upgrade quickly to the newest version of the software.  Apparently, a vulnerability in my outdated WordPress install was probably the root of my woes, and don’t I look stupid now for not having prevented it.  So, please, do better than I did, and keep on top of it.

Ditty A Day

This is a very special day for this blog.  Today, I introduce my newest musical gimmick, Ditty a Day.  Here’s the basic premise: every weekday, I will create and publish a little bite-sized morsel of music, and post it here.  This is all at once tons of fun, absolutely terrifying, and excruciatingly difficult for someone like me, who tends to lack the discipline for an ongoing daily exercise like this.  I figure it’s a win for everyone; I force myself to write at least a little bit of music every day, I learn more about Logic Pro, I get (potentially) more traffic to this here site, and you all get something hopefully entertaining on a regular basis.

So, check back later today for the first ditty, and stay tuned for more, each weekday.  I have no clue how long this will go on, but I plan on doing it for the foreseeable future, as long as life doesn’t seriously get in the way.  So buckle up–this will be fun!

PS – If you like what you hear, make sure to subscribe to the podcast versionClick here to subscribe in iTunes, or use this address in any podcast aggregator: http://www.johnlago.com/feed/podcast/.

Lightbox Issues

So, maybe someone who reads this can help me. I’ve installed and activated, in turn, just about every popular Lighbox plugin for WordPress, and none of them seem to working at all. Every single time, even when I include the rel=”lightbox” part of the link tag, no lightbox. Has this happened to anyone else? What gives?

[EDIT: Fixed it.  It was a theme compatibility issue.  Look for Lightbox effects here soon!]

Vacation

I’ll be away for the next two weeks, so no new posts from me.  However, I do believe there will be some very special guest blogging here, so stay tuned for that.  If nothing else, it will be funny.

Topbar

Does anyone know how I can fix my navbar on Macs?  On both Firefox and Safari, the lightup orange boxes are a few pixels too high.  When I fix it for Mac, it’s too low on PCs, and vice-versa.  It’s kind of driving me nuts, and I’m not smart enough to fix it on my own.

Wordle

I’m now obsessed with a site called Wordle.  It makes word clouds out of any text you feed it.  When I give it all the text from this blog up until now, it spits out something that looks like this.  Kind of cool, no?

Blog Wordle