Kindle: One Year Report

Last year, I bought a Kindle before heading out to Boston to work on the Obama campaign. Since I gave +1 week report, I thought I’d give a one year report as well.

Overall, I’ve remained relatively happy with the Kindle – I continue to carry it around with me pretty much anytime I’m traveling (bus, train, or plane) and the day to day experience, remains largely the same. This sums up both the pros and cons – it’s useful enough to be probably my most used device after my computers and cell phone because it just works – it takes only a few seconds to wake up before you’re up and reading, and only requires a few minutes of charging every few days (whenever I get around to it). On the flip side, there haven’t been (m)any major software updates. The listing screen remains as useless for managing a larger number of books, and the browser, which I use a fair amount for reading longer articles remains as weak as the day I got it.

As for the deletions, post-hoc edits, and other issues… it’s certainly remains problematic – hopefully the high profile of these occurrences force more people to think about its implications and consequences (as I did when I bought my Kindle, I’ll point out Mark Pilgrim’s essay – in light of what has happened, those that attacked the essay as polemic or hyperbolic might reconsider these dangers as quite real, and without the proper checks and balances, inevitable). That being said, in practice, my personal usage hasn’t been impacted much. I’ll probably feel differently when I decide to switch reading devices.

When I got my Kindle, I started keeping tracks of my purchases in a spreadsheet. Some details:

  • I’ve bought about two dozen books on the Kindle this past year. Lower than I would have thought, but I’ve been pretty busy this past year…
  • About 3/4 of these books are Mobi vs Topaz formatted. While there are tools for decoding your mobi books, there are none for Topaz books
  • Over 3/4 of the books are also non-fiction, for whatever reason
  • I didn’t keep track of the samples I’ve downloaded and while you can see your order history on Amazon’s site, they don’t display your sample downloads (I can’t imagine Amazon not actively crunching those numbers internally)
  • I marked down the price on Amazon when buying the Kindle books, my overall savings rate vs the Amazon price for the physical book was 39.07% or $157.84, (nowhere near the cost of the device).

On that last point though, even beyond factoring in the convenience factor, I guess that’s not quite a complete picture. I’ve also read about about the same amount of books from ManyBooks.net and other sources. And I’ve sent myself lots of documents (it seems that Amazon only started charging the delivery fee recently), and I’ve also read a few hundred articles via the browser (primarily using pushpopurl) – in fact, my default behavior for longer online articles is now to save them for reading online later. It’s not perfect – the Kindle browser really sucks, has not control over font size or line-height, and often has strange spacing issues, but even with those drawbacks, the reflective e-ink screen is so much easier on the eyes that it’s still worth it.

Nicholson Baker recently wrote a long article in the New Yorker which was pretty negative about Kindle (which I read on the Kindle, of course), and while many of his complaints are valid, I think he misses some of the point – while the E-Ink screen might not be as good as paper, for reading big chunks of text, it’s a huge improvement over a monitor. If you travel or are in the habit of reading multiple things at at once… well, you just can’t do that with physical books. He ends up recommending the iPod Touch for reading, but that doesn’t work very well outdoors or in sit-down transit (I’ll agree the iPhone is much more convenient in the subway). That he talks about the bright glow and the pleasant experience of night-time reading though seems to tell me that he doesn’t spend nearly as much time staring at screens as I do. Lastly, I’ve found that none of the other alternatives (even the iPhone) are as slick as the Kindle for personal documents. Emailing yourself a wide range of formats and getting it converted and delivered via 3G and having it pop up at the top of your reading list is just a very pleasant experience.

My major frustrations really revolve around form factor (well, being able to reasonably read A4/Letter sized two-column technical papers) and that I’m not able to better track my reading activity – not that I’d want a third party to have that information necessarily, but the types of self-instrumentation and tracking for reading patterns and the like is… exciting to me.

My next report will probably be in a year, or maybe a bit earlier if there’s a compelling alternative (the Plastic Logic reader form factor and feature set look great, however the performance might be a bit of an issue – having already gone through one horrible reader, I don’t think I’d be willing to compromise much on power management, wake-up and page turning performance).

Ahh, Nostalgia…

I was clearing out some old files from my server and came across a bunch of old Prodigy videos (VOB no less!). Before “Big Beat” they were straight up rave. Pretty fun stuff.

Of course these are on YouTube, so thought I’d share.

(Everybody in the Place, Out of Space, and Wind It Up are from Experience (1992) and No Good is from Jilted (1994)).

Neither here nor there, but back somewhere between 94-96, Prodigy’s “Jericho” and “Fire” were some of my first MP3 tracks. I believe it took most of my of my computer’s CPU to play (I think it was a 386SX that had a Cyrix 486 upgrade by then?) to decode with Winplay (there was a DOS based player before Winplay, right? Or maybe I’m confusing some tracker players with that…). One of these days I’ll have to try to dig that old stuff out, since the dates are all a bit fuzzy.

SXSW Music 2009 Wrapup

Like last year, I tried to shoot some video of the sets I went to for SXSW Music. This time, I tried to get more substantive clips. I also upgraded from a Leica D-Lux 3, which had OK video quality but very poor sound quality to a Samsung NV24HD, which shot 720p H.264 video and higher bitrate audio. The sound (mics) still leave a bit to be desired, but overall I was pretty happy with the results, especially since the camera is very pocketable (camera battery life was my main bane).

I’ve finished posting most of my videos on Vimeo. Here are some of my favs:


I wanted to catch them after hearing them on the SXSW torrent and saw they were only playing once. They got started a bit late (good for me, since I first hit the British Embassy), and didn’t disappoint.


I tried to catch Yppah last year after discovering him on a Ninja Tune compilation, but it was just a DJ set. This year, he was w/ a live band which was more along the lines of what I was expecting.


Just a tiny clip of Amanda Palmer in church. The funny story behind this is that there are two church venues right next to each other and I was totally confused on why the schedule was all off…


Unfortunatley, by the time I got a better view, my battery had given up the ghost. He played a song at the end of Quincy Jones’ keynote, so I knew I had to see him play at the Elephant Room that night…


For whatever reason I never gave them a good listen, which thankfully is rectified because their set was great.


The only artist I saw twice this SXSW because I lurve Alcatraz Kid (his first album) so much. The venue was a bit out of the way, but I also had flan while I was out there, so that worked out.


Tell me when P.O.S. will be in town and I will be there.


The best set I saw this year. Great songs, amazing performance, front row. Damn skippy.


One of my few “I wanna catch that” artists, I missed him in the previous days, and with the venue opening super late, I was fearing the worst, but I got to see a great, if short set, so that worked out.


I had only caught one track from the torrent, but got it in my mind to check her out and was pretty pleasantly surprised.


This isn’t the greatest clip, but Nosaj Thing’s set roxored. Will definitely need to catch him next time he’s rocking a party in SF or LA.

I didn’t catch as many day shows as I had some work to do, but overall, I was again very happy w/ my SXSW Music experience.

This was also my 10th SXSW Interactive – which flew by way too quickly (and was surprisingly, even larger than last year). I want to say that maybe next year is a good time to take a break, but I can’t say that I didn’t have a lot of fun catching up with old friends again.

What I’ve Been Up To Lately

Since the beginning of the year, I’ve been spending most of my waking hours working on a new project with an old friend. It’s still a bit of a work in progress, but we’ll be at ETech this week and at events at SXSWi and SXSWm the week after, so what better time then now for a long rambly blog post introducing the Lensley Automatic.

Our new photobooth
hello.
A couple years ago, Jaime decided to build a photobooth (and with no prior experience, headed off to Home Depot…) and it’s been percolating along since. We’ve done events at the X-Games, the US Open, and with clients like Nike, Adidas, Diesel, Fuel.TV, Fuse.TV, MTV, etc. Towards the end of last year, after returning from a several month long interruption working on the Obama campaign (that worked out OK, btw :), we decided that it was time to take it to the next level.

It’s been an incredibly busy past few months, but what we’ve ended up with I think is something pretty unique (with a lot of potential). We have a new and improved enclosure (although, admittedly, a new version is already cooking), and more interestingly (well, it certainly took a lot more of my time) our own custom software for the booth, visualizations, and network interaction, giving us the ability to completely customize the printed output, the booth user experience, and the digital followup. For a start, we’ll be tweeting and posting photos to flickr w/ autotagging by way of RFID (fingers crossed on that!) at ETech. Just the first of the cool things we have planned.

And, while learning Cocoa hasn’t been all roses, it has been a great deal of fun working on a project that touches on hardware, visualization, photography, events, and the social web (and soon, video and mobile) – it’s a big cross section of “things I’m interested in.” Plus, all the joys of starting a small business (that’s half facetious, but also half genuine). Sure the timing might not be ideal, but all in all, it’s been a great experience in terms of stretching out some different muscles after being a bit cooped up. And well, there’s no time like the present to do your own thing.

Oh, if you’ve seen me in person in the past couple months (not likely!) and I’ve been more scatterbrained than usual (or have been responding in a zombie-like fashion), now you know why. (Not helped by the fact that for whatever reason, I spent a good few weeks of development time on a 4pm-10am schedule.)

Book Reviews

The book review of Daemon on Boing Boing reminded me that I’ve been meaning to put in my 2-cents in. A friend recommended Daemon to me last month – it’s a techno-thriller that has an interesting meta-story of being self-published and gaining popularity originally from word of mouth of bloggers and the like. It’s definitely a page turner, and I quite liked the premise and how it started, but towards the end, it unravels into extreme silliness (and stupidity), which was sort of annoying. (some spoilers) I wasn’t as bothered by the central, and ever-expanding, conceit of having an ultra-coordinated organization powered by a bunch of shell scripts (although it really strains credibility as the story goes on), but rather by how stupid and incompetently TPTB were depicted at a pure tactical level. The last incident at the bunker could have never happened for at least a half-dozen simple reasons. Instead of being exciting or thrilling or whatever it was meant to be, it just offended my sensibilities. Anyway…

The second novel that I finished recently was Neal Stephenson’s latest, Anathem. I’m not sure when I really committed to reading it – I spent a long while near the beginning going through a page or two at a time (basically thinking about that xkcd comment) which wasn’t helped by the format – reading it on the Kindle meant that it was pretty impossible to flip to the glossary or appendices (of course, in theory, ebooks should actually be better with annotations and definitions for things like this, but no one’s taken the time to do that properly yet). On the bright side, the Kindle is probably at least a pound or two lighter than the 960pg hardcover, so I guess that wasn’t the worst trade off.

Once it got up and running, however, the story actually starts to zip along. Not only are you rewarded for the initial slog, but that experience is actually tied in, both thematically and within the plot itself – which I found to be pretty clever. And, there’s an honest to god real ending to boot. So, kudos to Stephenson for that. I’m sure that I’ll be re-reading this at some point, and that it’ll be worth it.

Recently Reading

The middle of last year was pretty much completely dominated by politics for me. Memeorandum replaced Techmeme as my starting page, and TPM and FiveThirtyEight were at the top of my reading list. Since then, my attention has started floating back. Here are some of my recent faves (blogs that have been intersecting well with some of my current interests):

  • aaronland – for whatever reason (having more spare time? 🙂 I noticed myself reading more of Aaron’s excellent (and lengthy) essays this year. (geo, maps, photos)
  • tecznotes – another one of the blogs that I’ve been following for a while that I’ve been digging a lot more – probably also has to do w/ being able to get back into doing cool stuff. Mike’s everyoneiknowisdoingawesomeshit tag seems apt to mention here (visualization, maps)
  • Duke Listens! – there are a couple music technology blogs I’ve been following, but this one, by Sun researcher Paul Lamere I think has been the most consistently interesting (music, recommendations)
  • SmugBlog: Don MacAskill – I’ve spent more than my share of time the past couple years thinking about scaling, and it was nice to find a blog/community of people talking about some of the nuts and bolts (mysql, hardware, scaling)
  • Perspectives – James Hamilton (AWS) has also been publishing some great stuff along those lines, mostly around data center efficiency (data center, hardware, scaling)

I also now have a pretty reliable stream of AV stimulation through my Vimeo channels and groups. Not that there’s any shortage of interesting things – it always amazes me when people talk about being bored online – attention continues to be what’s in short supply for me, even now being able to set my own schedule.

I’ve been cranking away for the past few weeks on a new project, but hopefully I’ll have a chance this week to catch up w/ some posts, including some of the stuff I’ve been working on.

New NSA Surveillance Revelations

New information on targets for domestic surveillance on tonight’s Countdown with Keith Olbermann:

Interestingly, so far, Google News is showing only 3 stories following up on this, which is surprisingly since the implications… are disturbing to say the least.

From Russell Tice’s Wikipedia entry:

In a press release issued by the National Security Whistleblowers Coalition on December 22, 2005, Tice explained the public aspect of his charges, stating that:

“As a Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) officer it is continually drilled into us that the very first law chiseled in the SIGINT equivalent of the Ten Commandments (USSID-18) is that Thou shall not spy on American persons without a court order from FISA. This law is continually drilled into each NSA intelligence officer throughout his or her career. The very people that lead the National Security Agency have violated this holy edict of SIGINT.”

In a letter dated January 10, 2006, Renee Seymour, Director of the NSA Special Access Programs Central Office, warned Tice that members of neither the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, nor of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence had clearance to receive the classified information about the SAP’s that Tice was prepared to provide.

On February 14, 2006, UPI reports Tice testified to the House Government Reform Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats and International Relations that the Special Access Program might have violated millions of Americans’ Constitutional rights, but that neither the committee members nor the NSA inspector general had clearance to review the program.

There’s some more background at SourceWatch. I’ve got to simultaneously admire Tice’s patriotism and bravery, and also, well, hope for the best for him. Heck, I wonder if he’s been able to get another job since? Also, just thinking about the ramifications of how he, or really any citizen’s communications being completely monitored… just reflecting on that sort of information asymmetry is corrosive to any idea of how a democracy could function.

Switched to WordPress

One of the things that I reassessed at the end of the year was the likelihood that resuming development on my personal blogging software would be anywhere near the top of my priority list. With the answer being a resounding no, and the advances that WordPress 2.7 has made (particularly w/ the admin interface), it made sense to finally stop putting it off and switch over.

Whipping up a direct database import was pretty straightforward and didn’t take long (less than 80 lines all-told), and I was able to import all 4,149 entries (and over 900 revisions) without a hiccup. I also imported additional the legacy urls and IDs as additional metadata. I ported over my current look into a template, and added my legacy code handling so even my most ancient blogger and other static-based posts should continue to resolve (the 404 checks to see files resolve in legacy.randomfoo.net and I have a few additional redirects that mostly seamlessly forward along the most ancient requests).

The last thing on my plate is figuring out how to best migrate Disqus comments to the new posts. I think that I’ll need to modify the Disqus WP plugin to pull from the legacy_id when applicable. Until then, I’m just redirecting old posts to the old system.

Also, sorry for those subscribing to my feeds for the potential dupe-age. Old posts retain their previous guids, so I guess it’s up to your feedreader to see how it’ll handle the transition…

A few interesting numbers:

  • 2554 posts in Blogger starting in 2000 (not counting my older FA410 class blog from ’99)
  • 1256 posts via text files in vim starting in 2003
  • 1300 posts in a custom db-backed system starting in mid-2004

So, anyone have recommendations on indispensable plugins?