Andy Marken’s Content Insider #246 – Same But Different

Millennials Are Individuals, Not Demographics

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“There's definitely something in here with us!” – David, “Alien 3,” 20th Century Fox, 1992

Now that we can easily get the information, we love to classify people according to one of the many categories the industry has developed over the years -- Boomers, Millennials, teens, pre-teens; white, Asian, Hispanic, African-American; as well as bosses, us, politicians, honest people.

Marketers like to have this information because it makes it possible for them to tailor their messages and pitch stuff to you.

It’s really amazing how much your being online and connected 24x7 produces comprehensive piles of data about who you are, what you do, where you go and what you think about. Guess that’s why they call it Big Data.

The generation that most in the industry like to pay attention to is Millennials (18-29) they’re the first generation that has grown up online.

As Ripley explained, I've been out here a long time.”

Even a little shift in their technology usage gives you a real good indication of how younger generations will quickly adapt it to their usage – faster, better, more thoroughly.

Blurred Lines
The generational breakdown numbers are pretty impressive for the online generation.

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Global Footprint – Millennials (19-29) were the first to be completely in the online world sharing ideas and information on a global scale. They bridge a lot the values and cautions of older generations but need to constantly be in touch with the younger generations. They are key individuals to helping us move across Michael Moore’s technology chasm. Source – U.S. Census

Older generations were first classified as the “Generation We” and were grouped as malcontents, coddled, naive (you know, the “occupy” movement).

Of course, your generation was labeled a pain in the behind just as Millennials have been, right?

Right!

Still, someone got that whole labeling thing wrong. Actually, they’re pretty adjusted in their own skin.

Ripley added, I'm on medication.”

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Not So Different – While older generations like to portray Millennials as the “We Gen,” they are actually pretty satisfied with their position and their progress in the world they have inherited. Sure, they don’t think their present job is a lifetime career point, but do you anymore? Source – Kenmexa Institute

Heck, they’re more satisfied with the recognition they receive than the older categories (boomers, Gen Yers), more satisfied with their progress, and not really dissatisfied with their work/pay.

It’s true, they don’t plan to stick with the same job (33 percent), compared to the older generations (average of 24 percent); but hey, they were looking for jobs when they found the ones they have now.

Different Focus
Millennials certainly have a different work ethic than prior generations as Pew Research and Tempo, a firm that produces “painless time tracking” recently reported.

Looking at the timesheets, Dillon declared, He's *never* lied to me! He's crazy, he's a fool, but he's not a liar!”clip_image008

Differences – The things that make generations different also make them stronger, better. The question was open ended and Pew chose the top five most frequent responses across each generation. Differences look pretty similar don’t they? Source – Pew Research

We didn’t realize that companies still waste time tracking time, but Tempo reported that:

  • Millennials wasted four times more time than earlier generations
  • The more educated, the more time wasted
  • Time wasters were iNet usage (48%), coworker socializing (33%), personal business (30%), personal calls (19%)
  • Excuses – lack of work satisfaction (49%), underpaid (34%), no incentive (24%), work hours too long (19%), “everyone else” is a distraction (18%)
  • Reasons for lost productivity – fixing others work (54%), office politics (47%), waiting for coworker (42%), meetings (42%)

Different Tools
That probably hasn’t changed much with each generation, but what has changed is their use of devices and the way they communicate:

  • · Their desire to blog has dropped from 24 to 12% in the past five years
  • · Their use of social networking sites has increased from 37 – 51% in the past four years
  • · Facebook is the most commonly used location but they’re cautious, skeptical about what they post
  • · 81% are wireless internet users – 55% on laptop, 55% on a mobile phone, 28% on another device
  • · Two-thirds own a laptop, while only 58% own a desktop
  • · While teens own an average of 3.5 gadgets – cellphone, mp3 player, computer, game console, portable gaming device; Millennials have an average of four devices – cellphone/smartphone, laptop, desktop, mp3 player, gaming device, ebook reader, tablet, iPad

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Follow Us – Millennials have not only led their elders into the digital community they have also pointed out that the online world is one where you have to be a little more cautious and careful. They tend not to jump into the deep end on each new advance, but try it to see if it is worthwhile to invest their time in mastering. Source – Pew Research

Older generations seem to be obsessed with all of our newfound technology while Millennials and younger just tend to take it in stride, picking and choosing the device and solution that meets their need at that moment.

As Melanie Shreffler, editor-in-chief of youth market research firm, Ypulse, recently noted, “It’s possible there’s too much technology in our lives, even for Millennials.”

Millennials are willing to share their information when it is to their benefit and that includes their brand preferences.

Young Adult Internet Users Worldwide Who Are Willing to Share Their Brand Preference Online

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Cautiously Out There – Millennials around the globe are using sites to establish themselves and make their wants/needs known. They share product information but “Like” just doesn’t mean what people would like you to think it means. Like it’s OK! – Source - Edelman

The challenge for marketers is to walk the fine line of “talking” with them without promoting at/past them to the older generation that is working side by side with the Millennials and wants to brandish his/her latest technology understanding/expertise.

Different Marketing
You have to remember that Millennials are running just as hard, just as fast to keep up with Gen C teens/tweens who never knew life before the Internet. For them, phone booths, mailboxes and faxes were historical things. Clever generation centric ads usually fail…miserably.

Gen Xers, Boomers who create/target the campaigns might say they’re cool, but really? The same goes for the medium surrounding the message.

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Ad Influence – Many advertisers question the value of their online advertising and struggle to show a tangible return on investment (ROI). Funny isn’t it, the old stand-bys – reading about it, visiting the store, receiving a direct contact deliver the best results, even with Millennials. Source – The Neilsen Company

It’s easy to say that the latest, hottest social media site is where the ads should be to educate, interest, influence and sell ‘em.

Sorry, they just don’t care what tech gadget they’re using to get the information they want.

“Liking” something is okay for older/younger folks, maybe.

Seeing the dilemma, Ripley said, Well, I guess I must make you nervous.”

After all, there are better places to get the real buying information.

Millennials’ Other Support Sources

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Only a Click Away – Millennials know exactly where to find assistance and information on problems, issues. They jump online to search for the answers or they access the company’s resources to get the answer themselves. Millennials are remarkably self-reliant. Source – Isurus Market Research

Millennials care about the health of the world around them as well as product quality, value, functionality.

BUT…they are also more image conscious than older generations, so cool factors also play in the buying decision.

You think Apple sells boatloads of iPads, iPhones, iTouchs, Macs because of better working conditions, smaller carbon footprint, superior value?

How about bling?

Yeah, maybe a little!

Millennials are very aware of where they do what online, how to manage their privacy, how to manage their digital trail.

As we noted earlier, Millennials have grown up in the digital era and live in a media-saturated environment.

When they have issues, questions or problems, they know where to go to find answers, solutions; which is way different from our approach (call a friend who understands this stuff!).

Organizations already see the impact Millennials are having on their operations with the widespread use of BYOD (bring your own device) and increased organizational/activity transparency.

At the same time, Gen Xers and Boomers are staying in the workforce longer than earlier generations and often they’re the folks in control of developing, changing our customer engagement models.

The challenge is there are no longer generational groups of consumers anymore.

There are individual consumers.

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Which is probably why Clemens said, “Now that I've gone out on a limb for you with Andrews, damaged my already less-than-perfect relationship with that good man and briefed you on the humdrum history of Fury 161; can you not tell me what you were looking for in the girl?”

G. Andy Marken is founder & President of Marken Communications

© 2012, John Obeto II for Blackground Media Unlimited
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The AbsolutelyWindows Freestyle: Jason Cohen, Global CIO of DAS

I thought I would be able to, but I haven’t had the time to clean up the audio in order to remove the background noise. Once I do, I’ll update & repost. My apologies.

Jason Cohen, New York Yankees fan and Global Chief Information Officer of Diversified Agency Services, with over 100 individualy companies under his management, took some time to give us this AbsolutelyWindows Freestyle.

© 2012, John Obeto II for Blackground Media Unlimited

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DAS Journey: A visit to a Converged Infrastructure Datacenter

On Thursday, September 6, 2012, I was in Atlanta, Georgia, at the first ‘public’ unveiling of a datacenter built utilizing HP’s Converged Infrastructure.

Diversified Agency Services, commonly known by the abbreviation DAS, is a unit of Omnicom Group with over 100 agencies under its umbrella.

That very fact, a platform aggregation project for 165 distinct business/operational units is nothing short of remarkable.

Remarkable in its vision, scope, design, and implementation.

What makes this entire project even more remarkable is the ease with which DAS is informing all of us about this project without reservation.

DAS has a series of blogs, videos, and other information about their journey to converged nirvana here.

The Genesis
As envisioned by DAS Global Chief Information Officer, Jason Cohen, this project, dubbed DAS Journey, was to flatten the entire networks of the DAS business/operational units – just about all of them independent companies – and use the resulting computing infrastructure to speed innovations to those same companies.

I heard you think it: this is perfect for HP Converged Infrastructure.

It is.

It was.

According to HP,

HP Converged Infrastructure is the only enterprise-class solution to quickly and securely build, manage and provision IT services regardless of delivery model

That leadership position has given HP several design wins, a few of them very high profile, such as DreamWorks Animation’s 100% move to HP Converged Infrastructure, also known as HPCI.

I have been following HP’s Converged Infrastructure for the past three years, and I like the way it is coming around.

The Executive Buy-in
As you would imagine, the project entailed working with an almost equal number (of individual company) CIOs and getting their buy in.

According to Jason, one of the most important things he did during the gestational period of the DAS Journey, was make sure he involved all stakeholders in it.

This assured them that they had a place at the ‘high table’, so to speak, and that their specific concerns would be addressed.

He also hired a communications spokesperson who was charged with making sure that everyone was kept abreast of all developments.

These two initiatives must have greatly help assuaged the fears of many an BU and/or OU executive with regards to their IT needs.

As an aside, I applaud Jason and his team for this. One of these days, I must ask him what pills he slipped into their restoratives for ego-containment!

Harnessing The Brightest Minds
According to Jason, what he did was look at the companies under his umbrella, and select what he felt were the best minds available, and offer them the opportunity to join his team.

One of the reasons a lot of these transformative projects fail is when ‘expert consultants’ that haven’t a clue about the business or businesses in question are brought in to either create, direct, or manage change.

Such decisions leave the minions unhappy, and is virtually guaranteed to scuttle the project.

By including the people with intimate knowledge of the companies into the mix, that #fail was avoided.

Selecting an engaged partner
One of the hardest, and most important things to do in such a project is selecting an engaged partner.

While partners are plentiful, selecting one whose decisions would be aligned with your business needs is a moonshot!

Luckily for DAS, they had an ongoing relationship with HP.

As a result, HP consulting services worked closely with DAS in order to provide DAS with the best solution for their (DAS’s) needs, not just to get an invoice.

The engaged cooperation and “HP White Glove” customer service has DAS well pleased with HP.

HP Converged Infrastructure
As I mentioned earlier, HP Converged Infrastructure is a client satisfaction-based initiative.

As HP sees it, while they have, and can produce solutions based on an homogeneous HP hardware, software and middleware stack, they realize that it might not be in the interest of the customer to do so.

Resultantly, DAS Journey Atlanta is a heterogeneous solution, with some routing by Cisco left there for legacy and management reasons based on recommendations by HP Networking and HPCI consultants.

That folks, is what “looking out for the client” really is!

As I see it
The benefits of using HP Converged Infrastructure in this DAS Journey project cannot be underscored. More importantly, the level of engagement DAS received from HP – even when HP didn’t even know if they would be selected for the project – is, and should be the topic of a whitepaper on successful prospective engagement.

This is another showcase for HP from a satisfied customer, and one where HP helped deliver a solution, albeit a heterogeneous solution.

I was able to get DAS’s Jason Cohen, Jerry Kelly, and B.G. Naran to participate in some interviews. I will be posting these AbsolutelyWindows FreeStyle videos in addition to a Q&A video shot after the datacenter tour.

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Thanks to HP (Teri & Samantha) and DAS for opening up the kimono and letting us into their new datacenter, and making executives available for interviews.

Many thanks to Ivy Worldwide – Terri & Tom – for making this happen.

© 2012, John Obeto II for Blackground Media Unlimited

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Reviewing Windows 8: 4 things I dislike about Windows 8 RTM

Microsoft Windows is the number one operating system on this planet.

And for good reasons: it is fast, Microsoft Windows is innovative, and it just works.

In version 8, it is much improved. In fact, just about every component and subsystem has been improved, with new functionalities subtly slipstreamed into the OS.

For about the past nearly two months, I have been using the RTM version of Microsoft Windows 8; first in a limited version – don’t want the expose my anonymous source, and then is a full version since the 15th of this month.

For the next several months, I will be talking about Windows 8, both in RT and regular form.

Believe me, I will talk a lot!

I intend to pick a feature, subsystem, or service associated with Windows 8 and talk about it. Bringing you my likes, dislikes, and its suitability to task for SMBs, the midmarket, and with the help of my interns, also give you a student’s/millenial’s/consumer’s view of the topic.

However, I would like to start my Windows 8 reviews by listing the things that have me extremely upset at the product.

Dislike #1: SLAT CPU Requirement
This is the one thing that upsets me the most about Windows 8.

Maybe we have been spoiled rotten by the inclusion of Virtual PC and basic virtualization in Windows 7, but the fact that Hyper-v 3.0 in Windows 8 is requires a SLAT-compatible CPU is beyond annoying.

For us, the inventory of systems our clients own have suddenly become useless for Hyper-v in Windows 8.

Mind you, these very same systems work just fine when Windows Server 2012 RTM is installed on them.

This is not acceptable.

Making matters worse, there isn’t a native virtualization component for Windows users without SLAT. Moreover, Virtual PC does not work with Windows 8.

What makes this situation untenable is the lack of any information from Microsoft clarifying the matter on why we need SLAT CPUs in the first place!

(There may be some information out there about this issue, but I have not seen it,)

This remains my most upsetting issue with Windows 8.

Dislike #2: Adobe Flash
My dislike for Adobe Flash is legion, and very public.Screenshot (1)

It is a piece of software that is so porous security-wise, that I do not use it at all, and I have banished it completely from all the systems we directly manage.

With Windows 8, Microsoft dropped a bombshell: Adobe Flash will be an integral part of Internet Explorer 10 (IE10) comes standard with Windows, and is part of a default install.

Even crazier, Adobe Flash for IE10 in Windows 8 does not have an uninstall function.

For throwing Adobe such a major bone, you would think that Microsoft would have gained s valuable concession from Microsoft regarding customer privacy and security.

They did not.

I have three issues with Adobe Flash:

i) Security: The only product that makes Oracle’s Java look secure is Flash. For goodness sakes, Flash is almost always linked to security vulnerabilities on a weekly, and even, almost daily clip!

Adobe’s responses are always slow, and information is never forthcoming.

ii) Privacy: Adobe on your system means it is a product that plays any and all videos on websites you visit by default. I do not believe there is anything more disconcerting than browsing over to a page only to be hear and see a video playing without your prompting it to do so. If you think that is bad, imagine how annoying it is happens in a background tab!

Bringing me to this: privacy settings for Flash is handled by Adobe. And remains so in Windows 8.

Why is this a good thing?

You would think that Microsoft could have extracted a concession from Abode whereby control remains with the users.

They did not. That is not good for consumers!

iii) Performance: Flash on a system negatively impacts system performance.

iv) Underhanded product upgrades: the new scheme at Adobe is to stealthily install Google Chrome on an unsuspecting user’s system when they try to upgrade Adobe Flash!

This nonsense is so wrong on several levels that it is hard to set start point!

All I can say to Adobe is, “STOP IT”! It does not endear your much-maligned product to the masses!

Dislike #3: Assumptions
One of my pet peeves with Windows 8 is the sheer number of assumptions surrounding “Social”.

This is wrong.

While I appreciate the customizations that accompany me when I login using my Microsoft Account credentials, I really, TRULY do not need to advertise my presence anywhere, be it on Lync, Messenger, and/or all others.

Taking it to the extreme, using the ‘Metro’ Music, Video, or Mail apps automatically sign you into Windows Live – or whatever it is called today!

Your screen is then filled with random crap and whatnot from the Windows/Xbox Music or Video Marketplaces.

All this to friggin’ listen to a song?

Come on, Microsoft!

Like I implored Adobe earlier, “STOP IT”! This sh’t doesn’t make me want to use any of these apps!

Dislike #4: IE10 & “Do Not Track”
Trip this: activating “Do Not Track” on IE10 in Windows 8 asks that websites do not track you.

Asks!

Are you friggin’ kiddin’ me?

Who pays attention to this?

Microsoft, if they had wanted to truly protect the privacy of users would have developed a dynamic mechanism for automagically blocking all privacy-shredding cookies and trackers, and made that the default!

Instead, they create this privacy placebo, and post it center stage when you install Windows 8 in order to make you feel that they are looking out for you.

Looking out for you…NOT!

In this instance, they kowtowed to the potential advertising $$$ out there.

To the detriment of end users!

Not a good move, Microsoft!

Conclusions
Windows 8, by all indications, is Microsoft’s attempt to retake the consumer mindspace from a certain company.

I believe they can succeed.

However, the issues listed here have the potential to create major pushback against Windows 8 from current users.

In virtualization for instance, how would someone who was happily running Virtual PC to manage VMs in Windows 7 feel when the person upgrades to Windows 8, and all of a sudden, he or she loses the ability to do so?

That is very bad no matter what the benefits of Hyper-v 3.0 are.

Don’t get me started on Flash or DNT in IE10!

Going forward
Whew, glad that’s over!

I really wanted to get this out of the way since my next 50 or so Windows 8 blogs will be about how much I like Windows 8.

How do I like it?

A lot!

Stay tuned.

© 2012, John Obeto II for Blackground Media Unlimited

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Getting back to the blogging scene, and trying some new things

For the past 18 or so months, we have transitioned the ‘day job’ from a pure SMB play to establishing a miniscule presence in the lower midmarket.

However, the transition was very tough, and demanded more of my time than I had thought, for the primary reason that these larger companies were outside of our forte, and I wanted to make sure that we gave them the same level of excellent Logikworx service our other clients enjoyed. Therefore, I managed these new clients personally.

Resultantly, my blogging suffered.

Greatly, I might add.

Now, that transition is complete, and we were successful in doing so.

Late in the day yesterday, I handed off daily operational control of the businesses to my EVP, while maintaining oversight. As I generally do.

That being the case, and with the advent of the Windows 8, Server 2012, and Windows Phone 8 eras being upon us, not to mention Windows Azure and the promise of seemingly effortless cloud enablement, I feel it is an opportune moment to return to the [blogging] fray.

I have also schneidered a couple of CompSci students at two universities in California into working on the blog as interns for the extremely elusive ‘future valuable considerations’. (They are kids, what do they know, eh?)

These interns will be charged with posting more frequently the articles that I find interesting, witty, and pertinent.

Over the next few weeks, we will be transitioning this blog to a new platform and/or template.

We are also pruning the list of products we have here for long-term reviews in order to better reflect our new mission. I have not decided whether to do a giveaway or raffle the items with proceeds going to the Baby Foundation (of Colorado) and/or the local food banks. We will see.

Anyway, I am back!

(For what it’s worth!)

© 2005-2012, John Obeto II for Blackground Media Unlimited

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HP Workstations, HP Discover 2012, other events

HP Workstations
In my opinion, HP Personal Workstations are without peer.

They are powerful, reliable, and innovative.

For the past several years, I have had the privilege of not only reviewing the workstations, but following the HP Workstation team – Jim Zafarana, Jeff Wood, Mike Diehl, and others – as they continually strove to differentiate their products from the fray.

They have succeeded. As referenced by them taking share in that market, the most important metric.

Earlier this year, I have the opportunity to attend the 2012 HP Workstation Event at the Vdara in Las Vegas. I took several photos, did some freestyle interviews, and generally had fun.

I published the results in the March 2012 issue of The Interlocutor with links to the media. Over the next few days, I shall post the videos here as well. I will time them to be virtually coincident with our HP Workstation previews and reviews.

HP Discover 2012, other events
I attended HP Discover 2012 and several other events.

However, due to an extremely limited bandwidth, I was unable to post the videos shot at that event.

I will do so now for HP Discover and other events if I feel the media is still relevant.

© 2005-2012, John Obeto II for Blackground Media Unlimited

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Upcoming reviews–August 2012

While we haven’t been posting as often, we have been busy.

We have been stressing the HP z220 SFF (Small Form Factor) Personal Workstation for the past four months, and we will tell you about it.

We are also in receipt of the HP EliteBook 8770w Mobile Workstation and we have our “One Week with…” thoughts coming up as well.

Not to be left out, we snagged one of the HP Proliant Microservers for a specific task, and we will tell you how that went as well.

We have had the opportunity to have reviewed both the Epson WorkForce 845 and the HP TopShot LaserJet Pro M275 in our Northern Colorado labs for the past several months. We shall be posting our reviews of these deskside devices later this week.

As I said, we have been busy!

© 2005-2012, John Obeto II for Blackground Media Unlimited

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A reply to “Why Windows Phone 8 Will Fail”

Earlier today, my attention was brought to this article on tbreak.com titled Why Windows Phone 8 Will Fail.

I immediately read it, thinking I would find a nugget I had missed in my thinking that Windows Phone 8 would succeed..

I did not find any nugget.

However, since I could not tell the reasons why in 140 characters or less on Twitter, I decided to post my rejoinder here.

The author’s three points are:

  • Where is the current growth coming from?
  • Abandoning your hero product
  • Relating to Metro will not happen instantly

The points are valid; however, his conclusions are incorrect.

Why, you may ask?

Let me explain on each point.

Where is the current growth coming from?
Yes, it is true that Windows Phone has picked up the remains of RIM’s BlackBerry implosion.

However, that is not all that it takes to succeed.

One of the ways required to succeed in this business – unless you are Apple with the iconic iPhone – is breadth of distribution. A large number of OEMS producing devices for the OS is another plus.

However, Windows Phone, in version 7.0 guise, was plagued with a dearth of both points above at release.

However, that changes with the launch of Windows 8.

In the Windows 8 era, Verizon Wireless, the number one smartphone distributor in the United States, is fully committed to Windows Phone 8 distribution as the number two platform on its network, focusing on Nokia devices.

This is huge, as Verizon Wireless is the mobile telco that made Android.

Moreover, taking Verizon’s lead, just about all other US telcos – apart from Sprint, which evidently hasn’t a clue! – will also release Windows Phone 8 devices.

If you mix in the increasing number of OEMs bringing Windows 8 devices to market, then two of the pillars on which rested the success of Android are now committed to Windows Phones.

Finally, the profits to be wrung out of Windows Phones are greater than either the OEMs or mobile telcos could ever extract from Android. Also, add the fact that most of these OEMs are already paying a monetary tribute to Microsoft for their abetting of Google’s willful and unlawful infringement of Microsoft’s IP (intellectual properties) with Android. For which it then behooves them to deliver Windows Phones in order to mitigate that pain.

Abandoning your hero product
The misconception here is that Microsoft somehow threw Nokia under the bus as regards Nokia and the (current?) Lumia line of Windows Smartphones.

Not so.

While it seems so long ago, and I mentioned it several times on Twitter*, Nokia CEO Stephen Elop was very definite in replying that Nokia was building Windows Phones – not Windows Phone 7x – devices all the times he was asked about the platform during the presser that announced the shift to Windows Phones by Nokia.

In fact, the myopic members of the press and blogosphere seem to have forgotten how quick they were to dismiss the Nokiasoft agreement because of this same fact.

Moreover, these folks were thus surprised that Nokia released the Lumia products when it did, since they were not expecting any Nokia products until Windows Phone 8.

Now that Nokia is moving on with Windows Phone 8, the new complaints are that Microsoft abandoned Nokia.

A little lesson is in order:

Nokia is currently Microsoft’s flagship Windows Phone OEM. Nokia’s Windows Phones have, in a short time, vaulted to the top of the heap where Windows Phones are concerned.

If anyone sincerely thinks that Nokia was unaware of Microsoft’s roadmap for Windows Phone is quite deluded. It is impossible that Nokia would have gone ‘all in’ with Microsoft if all pertinent information was not divulged.

Furthermore, apart from current owners of Nokia Lumia devices, who own perfectly good phones that will be upgraded gratis for them, the only ones worried about them are members of the media who have no vested interest in the future of the Lumias.

Relating to Metro will not happen instantly
This is just a throw-in.

There isn’t any empirical evidence of the unfriendliness of the Windows Phone UI.

In fact, there have been several published reports of the Windows Phone “Metro” UI being easier to use and master than any of the other smartphone operating systems out there.

That means that apart from the author’s anecdotal opinions, that point has no basis in fact, the wink-wink comedy value notwithstanding.

Finally
One of the things we must steadfastly ignore is a dependence on the noise in the blogosphere when we analyze situations.

Microsoft is a company that wants to make money, and most importantly, remain in the forefront of users’ minds when it comes to computing.

Abandoning mobiles isn’t the way to do so.

If Microsoft is going to lose this battle, it won’t be for the reasons mentioned in that tbreak.com article.

Bet on that!

© 2005-2012, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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Another Bitcoin breach?

Sometimes, you just have to wonder about some people.

Trip this: some folks got together to create a new global currency outside of the purview and control of the world’s governments.

With great fanfare, these people, with the help of the anonymous and pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto, came up with Bitcoin.

Now, I don’t want to get into the details of how they accomplished this, but Wikipedia has a page devoted to it here.

Suffice it to say that otherwise intelligent people fell for the Wild, Wild West promise of this ruse, and bought into it.

Over the years, we have been subjected to news of one Bitcoin breach or another, and I would wonder how come the failings of that escapade was somehow invisible to its adherents.

So why blog now?

Read this headline:

Bitcoinica users sue for $460k in lost Bitcoins

Seriously, I am NOT making this up!

My first thought was, what country is Bitcoinica, and where are the boundaries of its jurisdiction?

So I read the article.

What a joke the entire thing is.

Think about this: a bunch of anarchists band together to create their own virtual currency, only to have their membership rip themselves off.

So they go crying “whee, whee, whee” like the three little pigs to a real world court for redress for a theft of virtual money that took place on a virtual trading exchange.

These are the times we live in!

Full article here

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