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Comment One thing (Score 2) 209

>Steve Jobs was not creative. At all. Name one thing he ever invented.

I thought that he came up himself with the idea of the nifty magnetic power cable connector. A very good innovation that must have saved many a Mac laptop when users would step on the cable.
In any case he could see potential and kept on pushing his people further and further until he would say himself "ok, now we have something really cool.". It is that attitude that caused Apple to come with great products. Regarding Cook, he seems a perfectionist as well in a different way. Let's see what they will come up with their watch product before we really judge him. Apple was rarrely about being first to market for example with smartphones or music players, but they tend to do things truly well. Currently there is no smartwatch I would bother wearing. Considering Apple's history, there is a good chance that their approach will be a lot more attractive.

Comment Time for innovation - Re:Run a completely new OS? (Score 1) 257

>>What's the point in running a brand new OS on it? Is HP-UX not good enough? Or the many other *NIX's? I'll put money on Linux being ported to it before it even ships to Joe Public

Much as I like unixes (way back using early slackware distributions, now since 10 years on OSX), I do think that it is time for some real innovation. Unix dates from, what, 1970 or so. More than 40 years ago. We were all playing vinyl records for music back then. I think it would be good if a mainstream company (outside pure academia) would build from the ground up something usable yet radically fresh and truly future oriented. I remember that some 15 years ago Apple and IBM worked together on a radical object-oriented OS, but nothing came from it.

Comment Is it like most OSX software? (Score 1) 88

From the summary this seems like most OSX software: simply an icon with everything inside that you only need to drag to your Applications folder (or in the case of the OSX app store, the iconthat is downloaded). I've always liked this ultra-intuitive installation process.

Comment It is more subtle than thatRe:Books aren't special (Score 2) 211

There was a good article in The New Yorker a few months ago about the Amazon business practices.
Their very tough negotiation position typically forces the publisher to give big discounts, and even extra money to be listed high enough in the sales results.
Amazon books are usually cheaper than in many other stores so from a consumer level, this seems like a win for the capitalist philosophy.
However, it turns out that these huge discounts have a snowball effect towards the authors: they now typically get lower royalties per book, sometimes much lower. I had this confirmed by a few authors I know.
The danger for the general culture is that authors would write far less as they (except the most popular ones) will have to do more other work to have a normal standard of living. Most of the midlist authors, and those are in my opinion often the most interesting ones, already had to combine writing with other professional activities. In essence there is nothing wrong with that, but when at one point they have little time left to write, books will come much slower.
In some European countries there are fixed price laws regarding books, these are exactly there to ensure that writers can focus enough on their craft, it is seen as a matter of national culture that should be stimulated, not necessarily mercantilised.
I do agree that a purely capitalist attitude in this matter can be detrimental to culture over the longer term.
Discuss.

Comment Re:Why copyright for porn? (Score 1) 136

Well, you could be right. I am not an American. But I thought that let us say the artform was illegal in some American states. I read an article a few years ago about a particularly nasty actor/director in the genre (sorry, I forgot the name, others may chime in) who was jailed because of his extreme videos, while it was all consensual adults. If it were legal in that state, then why was he locked up?
Again, I am not American but because of this my perception is that it is not everywhere legal in the USA.
If it would happen, then the stars would need to find another job. I have no strong views pro or con myself, except perhaps that there is already enough of it to satisfy multiple lifetimes of self pleasure.

Comment Re:no thank you apple (Score 1) 174

I can see it becoming successful, like Airplay which is adopted widely, and Carplay also gets lots of interest.
For me, I am imagine that i wear the iwatch while sitting in the sofa and with a touch on its display I can quickly dim the lights. Or, when I am about to drive home in wintertime I use an iphone app to start heating the house.
Yes, other systems exist but I like the convergence.
Despite all the hate here, what Apple usually does very well is make technology accessible and userfriendly.

Comment Re:"Don't function all that well.." (Score 1) 399

Every 4 to 5 years would be good for servicing a mechanical watch, in your case with the extra mention of regulation.
A mechanical chrono is a terrifyingly complex device that needs pampering.to keep it at the top performance.
This service might be expensive, but still I would only order it from an authorised dealer.
Anyway, as I wrote elsewhere, 1 minute per month is an error of 1/(60*24*30) or only 0.02% (!!!), which in my opinion is very acceptable for a mechanical device.
Hence, I expect that it is within spec.You cannot expect the same accuracy as with a quartz watch.

Comment Re:"Don't function all that well.." (Score 1) 399

Fair enough, you are not in the market for a mechanical watch. If you'd buy a mechanical Grand Seiko or (usually) Rolex etc, then you could perhaps (!) reduce this to 20-30 seconds per month. Considering that this is all traditional mechanics, that would be as flawless and high a standard as you can get. Even 1 minute is an error of 1/(60*24*30), in my opinion a good result.
If you can't live with that, then quartz or atomic is the way to go. Nothing wrong with quartz, and in my opinion there is also nothing wrong with loving the intricate mechanics of traditional watchmaking, at the price of applying small adjustments from time to time.

Comment Re:No it isn't impressive (Score 1) 399

For precision, buy any $20 quartz watch. A mechanical watch is for those who love the beauty of the pure mechanical engineering. Some watch aficionados are snobs, some are not. I have as mall collection of watches, none really expensive, half quartz, half mechanical. I like m mechanical as much as I like my quartz in different ways. 1 minute per month is a few seconds per day, something I can easily live with and fascinating from an engineering point of view.

Comment Re:"Don't function all that well.." (Score 1) 399

Come on. It is still good, and falls within the COSC guidelines of something like +-4 seconds per day (sorry I forgot the exact deviation). For a mechanical construct, this is still well done. And what is wrong with liking the beauty of mechanics? For precision any $20 digital watch will beat all mechanical watches.

Comment Re:"Don't function all that well.." (Score 4, Insightful) 399

This Tag Heuer of the parent is an automatic, mechanical watch. Think about it, one minute accuracy over a month realised with only vibrating springs etc. That is technically impressive. FYI many quarts watches are rated +- 15 seconds per month, only 4 times better!
Nothing wrong with enjoying a mechanical watch for the joy of the fine engineering, and the pleasure of the nearly smooth second hand.
Interestingly, the mechanism of the modern Tag chronograpths is a close brother of a certain Seiko movement, something that the Swiis company prefers not to mention.

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