Archive for June, 2009

Libertarian Hatchet Job

Posted in tech on June 30, 2009 by themaroon

I found this article a few minutes ago about the rumors of antitrust investigations around Google. Like most Libertarian hatchet jobs these days, it starts with a belief in an unproven set of first principles roughly equating The Market with a just and loving God, mixes in a total lack of understanding of a complex issue, and arrives at a useless conclusion.

The author doesn’t know the difference (and it’s significant) between AdSense and AdWords, which is the first clue as to how little he actually knows about this issue. I’m not even sure where I side on the Google antitrust topic, but I know it’s a hell of a lot less simple than “Google makes the best search engine and as soon as they stop the money will flow elsewhere.” Anyone who has actually used either of those two products (I’ve done both) knows this.

It’s not hard to find people (via Google searches no less) who were making a lot of money and then were effectively put out of business by a change in or sudden enforcement of the nebulous AdWords or AdSense terms, or in Google’s results algorithm. It’s clear to anyone sufficiently knowledgeable about internet marketing that Google’s tremendous share of searches gives them unprecedented control over the flow of advertising dollars on the net.

The author continues:

In other words, Google is to be shackled so that future competitors can catch up to Gmail, Google Maps and Google Books.

Google Books is undergoing a controversy of its own in relation to their settlement with the Authors Guild giving them and only them rights to sell orphaned books digitally, which has nothing to do with what the DoJ is rumored to be investigating. I’m not sure where I stand on that issue yet either, but one thing is for sure: it’s small potatoes compared to AdSense/AdWords and search engine results.

Gmail is in 4th place behind Yahoo, Microsoft, and AOL respectively, and Google Maps does well but has far more significant competition than their search or advertising products.

In summation, this guy has very little clue what he’s talking about, but that never stops a Libertarian from writing a negative opinion piece about the government.

Epstein is an analyst at the Ayn Rand Center for Individual Rights.

Shocker.

Pre Re-Review

Posted in gadgets on June 22, 2009 by themaroon

Now that I’ve had a couple weeks to play with the new phone, I can give a little more perspective on it. For one, the battery life isn’t as bad as I’d thought. Probably due to some combination of firmware updates (got the third one today), me not playing with it incessantly, and learning to turn instant messenger off when not in use, I’m now getting through the day with very little trouble. If I pull it off the Touchstone in the morning and head in to work, I’ve usually still got 50-70% when I get home. I’m going on a trip Sunday, so we’ll see how it performs on the road.

The Touchstone is pretty much the awesomest thing ever. You set your phone on it and it charges. If someone calls you can push the answer icon and it automatically goes to speakerphone. Or you can pick up and it automatically answers. The magnet in that thing is very strong, so even though you have to orient the phone just so to get it to charge, it’s almost hard not to.

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The Pre is turning out to be one of the most hacker-friendly devices ever produced. Palm has published all of the open source packages they’ve used and modified. People have already got Doom up and running. And with one exception (in which Palm politely asked a developer forum to stop talking about tethering at Sprint’s behest in order to maintain positive vibes between all parties) they’ve been pretty encouraging. So despite the lack of a hardware-level SDK, I’m pretty encouraged about the future of the currently rather empty app store.

There are definitely a few improvements I’d like to see. For one, the ability to click a YouTube link found in a web page and have it load in the YouTube app. That app works perfectly, and that seems like a rather trivial feature to implement so I don’t really understand why this functionality is missing.

Tethering would be nice, if only so I could stop reading donkeys whining about the lack of it online. I had tethering on my previous phone (EVDO Rev A on Verizon’s network) and it worked as well as tethering does anywhere, but it still sucked so much that I just went back to purchasing the $10/day Wi-Fi from hotels. It’s one of those things that sounds cool, until you want to watch a YouTube video or download something from Bittorrent. Plus how often do you really want to use it? Especially with a device like the Pre, which already does much of what you’d use a laptop for anyway, it seems like a low priority.

I personally would like to see (and suspect we will before long) a soft keypad that works in landscape mode in browsers and apps. The physical keyboard is still unbeatable for typing out emails/SMSes/Tweets/IMs. But sometimes when you’re surfing the web, which for me is nearly always in landscape, you only need to enter a few characters (for instance to find a friend in Facebook’s search box) and for that an optional soft keypad would be really handy.

On the same note, I’d like a little more spelling correction and predictive typing. Apple had to add that to their phone to make up for the general crappiness of soft keypads, but Palm probably figured it unnecessary since they’ve got a dedicated QWERTY. And while they’re correct, it would be really, really nice. They do a little, automatically capitalizing the first word of a sentence, inserting an apostrophe into obvious contractions, and changing "u" to "you", but that’s about it. Because the keypad is such a superior input mechanism they should use a spelling-corrector that’s significantly less aggressive than Apple’s and just covers the basics, but they still should have that.

Better copy and paste would be very useful as well. As far as I can tell, right now all you can do is copy from one editable text field to another inside the same card. That borders on uselessness. I got a cool app to keep my encrypted passwords, but I can’t paste them into a browser. Since I use Roboform on my 3 computers, most of my logins are some 12 digit randomly-generated string of numbers and letters. Typing them is a major hassle, and involves me switching from one card to another and back again over and over. Please, oh please let me cut and paste.

Video recording would be a nice touch, and is one of the features whose absence I notice most. This is just software people, and any $20 clamshell can do it. It was ridiculous that Apple didn’t have that for 2 years (and still doesn’t on all but the newest model, despite the fact that third parties have proven it’s possible) and it’s ridiculous that Palm doesn’t now. I expect Palm will fix this too, since their current SDK wouldn’t enable a third-party to do so.

The IM client on the Pre makes iPhone users with their crappy third-party apps jealous, but I wish they’d do something about the battery drain like automatically logoff after ten minutes of non-use. I’d also like to see Yahoo! and MSN added, though people digging through the code have found what would appear to be those under development.

I love the way the Messaging app combines SMS and IM, showing me them both together in one thread and automatically responding using the last used protocol. It’s fantastic. What I don’t like is that it continues to use IM even when the person is signed off. In those cases I’d prefer it to automatically switch back to SMS, though at least they make it very easy to do manually.

Another goofy thing about the phone I discovered is that data roaming is turned off by default. Thankfully you just enable it once and then forget about it, but that’s sort of odd since Sprint requires you to get an all-you-can-eat plan in which that’s included, unlimited and for no extra charge. For only $70/month I get 450 peak minutes, nights starting at 7pm, unlimited EVDO Rev A data on both Sprint and Verizon’s networks (thanks to roaming) and unlimited text-messaging. (Anandtech’s awesome Pre review shows just how great Sprint’s pricing is, and hilariously shows a Target ad that’s clearly contextual because if you click it, it takes you to a light up plastic palm tree.) Maybe Sprint requested that of Palm in order to keep costs down.

Finally I had written that:

I’d also like the ability to easily clear email notifications. They stick around until you click them and load the email app, even if you delete it through your desktop client on Exchange (or presumably Gmail). It’d be nice if I could swipe them off to the side like you can do with many things to get rid of them.

Then I realized I hadn’t even tried it so I pulled out the phone and gave it a shot. It worked! Kudos Palm, kudos.

Die Micropayments, Die

Posted in tech on June 17, 2009 by themaroon

I have a new entry on the list of Web 2.0 words I wish would die: micro-transactions. Being in the virtual goods industry, I read a lot of publications about them and they constantly talk about micro-transactions and micropayments. (I’m only picking on TechCrunch with the links here because they’re the easiest and most visible, and they should know better, but it’s sadly pervasive.)

I’m tired of reading titles like “Zynga Pushing Nine Figures In Revenues Thanks To Micro-Transactions”. Micro-transactions implies they’re unusually small, or somehow different than all of the rest the millions of payments that occur on the internet every day. They’re not.

In fact, looking over the last roughly 4000 transactions we’ve received on our apps, the average transaction was $21.86. That’s not quite as high as Wal-Mart (~$56) or Amazon (~$54) are getting, but the markup is probably far in excess of theirs, and I’d actually be surprised if Zynga’s average payments are lower than ours.

But regardless, I hate being part of an industry whose success is routinely cited as proof that I and a bunch of other people are wrong about micropayments being largely worthless. If you define transactions ranging from $5 to $200 with an average of $20 as micropayments, then I guess we have to eat crow. If you define them in any sensible manner, then they’re still floundering.

World of Warcraft, Playstation 2 Most Played in April 2009 | Nielsen Wire

Posted in Me Thinking So You Don't Have To on June 12, 2009 by themaroon
Top Game Consoles January 2009
Rank Console Usage

Minutes %

1 PlayStation 2 21.6
2 Xbox 360 21.1
3 Wii 17.6
4 PlayStation 3 10.5
5 Xbox 6.7
6 GameCube 2.6
7 Other 19.9
Source: Nielsen Games – GamePlay Metrics™

Usage Minutes % is the percent of all measured console minutes

“Other” consists of any other console systems found in the home

More evidence that despite Wii-Mania, the Xbox360 is the real winner of this generations console wars. And perhaps evidence that it’s a Pyrrhic victory.

Phone Comparison

Posted in Me Thinking So You Don't Have To on June 11, 2009 by themaroon

Neat comparison. They should have expanded on the plans though, and thrown the G2 in rather than the G1 since the G1 is rather outdated and by far the least compelling in that roundup.

Palm Pre Review

Posted in tech on June 10, 2009 by themaroon

I picked up a Palm Pre on Saturday, and have been playing with it quite a bit since. It’s already gone on a road trip with me, and I’ve pretty much put it through its paces at this point. Here are my thoughts, starting with the hardware.

The phone has a unique feel that some people love and some people hate. I mostly like it. People equate weight and metal with build quality, which is usually not entirely inaccurate in portable electronics, so I can see why some people are worried about durability. Time will tell, but I don’t get the feeling it will be a problem. It feels pretty well-assembled.

The body is all plastic and feels very smooth and very light. The opening of the keyboard is nicely spring-loaded. Overall it’s smaller than most other full touch-screen phones, and only a little thicker, so it feels a little more pocketable than anything else I’ve held.

The keypad isn’t as bad as I’d feared after reading many reviews, but it’s definitely no Blackberry. I prefer it to the virtual ones by a long shot (I can still type one handed without looking, something you’ll never do on a touch screen) and I got used to it enough to type relatively quickly after just a few minutes, but it does feel a little cramped. They keys are a little too small and too close together, and the top row is a little too close to the rest of the device. It’s not the deal breaker I’d feared at least, but I don’t think I’ll be able to type quite as fast as I could on my last few devices. I do really like the way the keyboard curves outward when dropped, to make the phone easier to hold when typing or talking.

On the other hand, the keys are very well laid out. You can hit the “@” and the “.” keys without having to shift into special character mode, a tremendous boon in this day and age for a web device. So many of the services you use ask you to log in with your email address, so it’s very useful to be able to type it quickly and easily. Shifting into caps or special characters is as easy as it gets on a mobile device too, and Palm puts a nice little symbol under the cursor to make it easy to spot which typing mode you’re in.

Like most Palms, they threw in the awesome volume switch on the top of the phone. That was the biggest feature I’ve missed over the last few years since moving away from the Treo. There’s a standard-sized headphone jack up there too (nothing more annoying than when phones put them on the bottom) so there’s no need for special headphones or goofy adapters to listen to your tunes. It’s now replaced my iPod Nano for listening to audio books and podcasts on the way to/from work.

The speakerphone on the back has reasonable volume. The camera is a 3.2 megapixel that takes very good pictures, and comes with a flash that can be turned on, off, or left on auto. The volume and power buttons have just the right balance of protruding enough so that you can feel them while being small enough that you won’t bump them on accident.

One gripe with the hardware is the chintzy little door to the micro USB connector. It doesn’t sound like much, but that connector is both the phone’s charging port and of course its connector to your computer. If that door falls off and some little piece of whatever from your pocket gets in there you might have a real problem, and that feels like a distinct possibility. Palm really should have thought that one through a little more.

The capacitive touch screen is stunning, and the gesture area with one button below it may be my favorite invention of all time. It makes it easy to navigate without accidentally bumping links and buttons in web pages and apps. The screen has a nice feel to it too. I hear tell that it’s incredibly scratch resistant, but that’s the sort of thing I’m not inclined to find out for myself. It’s spent a little time in a pocket with some keys and come out unscathed, but not much.

Technically this one is software, but it fits here so I’ll mention it. One brilliant feature I haven’t seen on other touch screens is the little ripple that appears whenever you tap it so you know exactly where you pressed. It looks the ripple you see in water when a drop falls in. With any touch screen you sometimes have the experience of missing something you meant to click, and with the Pre you at least know exactly why.

The biggest hardware flaw, however, is the battery life. It’s bad. I remember, when the iPhone 3G came out, Mike Arrington saying something about how he was willing to strategically place chargers (presumably in his home, office, car, etc.) to get through the day because the phone was so good it’s worth it. I thought he was nuts at the time, but now I understand.

With heavy use of non-phone functions you’re not going to get through a whole day, especially if you have Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) on. In fact AIM has some sort of bug that causes it to drain battery life rapidly (though that seems like it may have been fixed with the latest OS update) so you have to be careful not to leave it on when you’re not using it. With all wireless protocols running, multiple apps in use and continuous web-surfing I’d say you’ve got about 3 hours on a full battery. I wish they had built in some way of at least intelligently cycling Wi-Fi off when you’re away from known networks, or turning AIM off after a certain amount of inactivity, or something of that nature, but they don’t seem to so you’ll have to do it manually.

The Wi-Fi antenna seems pretty solid, usually getting as many bars as my desktop. The GPS chip is reasonably fast for a phone too, which is nice when checking the weather or using Google Maps. I don’t think I’d want to use it for turn-by-turn directions, though it does come pre-loaded with that, but then I’m probably spoiled by my car’s built-in GPS.

For talking the device seems solid. I’ve only used it a little, but it’s worked perfectly. I was a Sprint customer for a long time previously, so I know their network is great (especially since you can roam on Verizon’s if needed). The entire rest of the world is blanketed in GSM, but for some reason the CDMA carriers own the US. It’s our technological equivalent of the metric system I suppose.

I would have appreciated a little extra volume in the phone’s speaker, but I was able to hear my aunt on the streets of Detroit, so it definitely isn’t bad. I don’t think it’s a phone I would recommend to the hard of hearing though, unless they were prepared to use a headset.

The Pre uses one of the most powerful processors ever put in a mobile device, and it feels like it. The loading times on most things are comparable to opening light to medium weight apps on your desktop computer. The whole system has an overall responsiveness that is truly impressive and friends who own the current iteration of the iPhone noticed a serious difference. I don’t know anyone with an Android unit handy to compare to, but it beats all the other phones I’ve tried by a wide margin.

So overall I’d give the hardware a 7.5 out of 10. The unit feels durable enough that I’m not too afraid of dropping it. It’s got a user replaceable battery (and I never go more than a year without doing so) which I consider a huge benefit, especially for a device that’s such a power hog. I plan on ordering a backup to carry with me when travelling and such. But the keyboard is cramped and the default battery inadequate, which keeps me away from giving it a higher mark.

If the hardware is a bit rough, the software is a perfect 10. Seriously, there’s truly nothing like it out there yet. WebOS is an engineering and usability marvel, such that I almost don’t know where to begin when describing it. I’ll start with the most basic feature, contacts.

WebOS uses what Palm calls Synergy. The idea behind Synergy is that you have little pieces of your life scattered across a number of places. Your phone has the names and numbers of most of your closest friends and family. Your Gmail or Outlook or Exchange Server account has scores of email addresses. AIM has instant messenger names and Facebook has all sorts of data, including pictures, depending on the privacy preferences of your friends there.

Synergy goes ahead and intelligently rolls them into one place in your phone. You give it your credentials (in my case, I use Gmail for personal emails, Exchange Server for work, AIM and Facebook.) Now you’ve got a contact card for everybody, and where it can it combines them into one. For instance if I search for my cofounder John Marks, who has an entry in every one of those accounts, it shows me one contact card that contains his AIM, Google Talk/Gmail, email addresses, physical address, phone number, his Facebook picture, etc. Every bit of data from every site is automatically lumped together into one contact. It does a very good job of this, and in the instances where it fails to combine contacts (usually an AIM account) it’s very easy to do manually. I have a lot of contacts and it took me maybe 15 minutes of work to get them all squared away. Without Synergy doing all of that would have taken days.

Synergy is also useful for IM and SMS, where it rolls the two together into one threaded conversation. So whether John texts or IMs me, I’ll see them in the same place, and automatically respond via the same protocol. I can view Buddies or Conversations in the Messaging app.

Email accounts are handled similarly. The Pre of course supports Active Sync, and it also supports IMAP IDLE, which means I can get emails from both my Exchange Server and Gmail pushed to me as soon as I receive them, rather than periodically polling. In the mail client, I have a combined inbox, but can also view the accounts separately and dig through subfolders.

Email is only missing one major feature, which is search. For some reason they left emails out of the Universal Search feature. With that and a better keyboard the Pre would be the best email device ever made, and I expect Palm to introduce both in future models and OS versions.

Which brings me to the next feature, Universal Search. Just start typing on the Pre home page and Universal Search takes over. It filters through your contacts and applications, showing you any applicable results, and if there are none it brings up a few buttons that let you easily search Google, Maps, Wikipedia, or Twitter with one press. It’s a brilliant feature for a web-enabled device, and makes using it a little more fun.

The web browser is nearly identical to that of the iPhone, right down to the pinching to zoom. They say good artists copy and great artists steal. If that’s the case, Palm is basically Pablo Picasso when it comes to the browser. They lifted everything right down to the double tapping to zoom into a div. They even stole the multi-touch gestures, patents be damned.

All of the above is tied together beautifully by the “deck of cards” metaphor. That’s something unique to WebOS, and within 15 minutes of using it you realize you could never go back. The rest of the features are available (if maybe not implemented as well) on other high end smart phones like the iPhone or G1 or, like Synergy, they’re really lovable but that you could work around with enough effort or simply do without. The easy and intuitive multi-tasking, however, is a new necessity.

Palm treats every phone function as an app. Calling, messaging, email, music, everything. It’s all its own app, and each app resides in its own card. Switching through cards is like riffling through a deck, you press a button or swipe upward from the gesture area to get into your home view, where you see them all shrunk down. Background apps are continuously running, and you can see them all changing in real time. Then you simply flick through them side-to-side. When you want to close an app you flick it upwards. You can even reorder them in the deck, though I never find that necessary.

The ability to multitask so well is the phone’s money shot. A recent example would be me listening to music from the music app, while reading news in the New York Times app. Then I got a call, so my music automatically paused and the phone app came up. After I finished the call, I closed the phone app and the music started again, then I flipped back to NYT and got back to reading. I could have read the news while talking too, but I probably wouldn’t be much of a conversationalist that way.

Palm also has a great system of notifications, so when an out-of-focus app has something important to tell you (for instance, an incoming email or SMS) they pop up at the bottom briefly, then disappear and leave a little icon behind for easy access. They strike the perfect balance, being simultaneously noticeable and unobtrusive.

The Launcher, where all of your apps are, is very well done. It shows 9 at a time, and you can easily add any webpage to it. I added Google Reader and Yahoo News. It even lets you easily make thumbnails from their page. You can reorder the apps, and swipe through pages in the launcher similar to swiping through running apps in home view. Personally I’m finding it easiest to put my top 9 apps on the Launcher’s start page, and simply use Universal Search to get to anything else.

The included apps are nice. It comes with a YouTube app, though I haven’t used it much so I can’t really say anything about it other than it works. You can search YouTube for anything, or view popular videos just like you could on YouTube.com. There are music and video players which are rather Spartan for sure but get the job done. You won’t mistake the Pre for an iPod, but it does most of the stuff an iPod does, and comes with about the same storage as a Nano, so for a lot of people it will obviate the need for a standalone mp3 player. You can also purchase tunes directly through Amazon if you’re so inclined, but really, who actually pays for music anymore?

There’s Calendaring, Tasks, and all of the other little frills you expect in a smart phone these days, but the killer app is probably Google Maps, which works with your GPS chip to make it easy to find nearby businesses and get directions. There’s also a memos app that lets you make little sticky notes, a clock app (that doesn’t ship with the phone but installs when you upgrade the OS) a calculator, Sprint TV and some Sprint NECKCAR thing, and some other frills I haven’t really explored much. The built in IM client in the Messaging app that uses AIM and Google Talk is great, if a battery hog.

Over time the App Store will presumably be where you’ll go to extend your phone. Right now it’s rather sparse, with just a handful of apps. There’s a good weather app, a New York Times and an AP app that gives you the news in an ideal format. The ubiquitous Pandora is there of course. There are some other things, mostly location-based services that all blend together into one big pile of “who cares?”, but the platform is still clearly in its infancy. The ease of development though, and the speed at which the phone sold out on launch day, make me think it will become at least the second biggest app platform in a relatively short amount of time. It’s got quite a mountain to climb to get to the top, but I’m betting a chunk of my IRA on the fact that it will get there.

The help application is also fantastic. The overall OS is so intuitive that you can figure out how to do most things on your own, but whenever you get stuck, there’s the help app. It does an awesome job of telling you how to customize the phone as much as possible. I’ve searched through it quite a bit and it’s very extensive. It turns out most of the stuff I couldn’t figure out how to do just can’t be done.

Which brings me to my one major gripe with the OS, the lack of customization. Some of the apps have preferences pages, but there’s generally very little there. I feel like the OS is a little dictatorial. I can’t, for instance, remove Twitter from universal search, or add Google News instead. I can’t set AIM to turn itself off after a half hour of inactivity. I can’t do a lot of little things I’d like to be able to. I realize there’s a balancing act there for sure, but I feel like Palm could have put a lot more customizability in there without detracting from usability or intuitiveness. I’m hoping future updates fix this.

But overall I’m betting that Palm and WebOS have a very bright future. There are some serious limitations so far on the hardware, but for a first release they did a magnificent job. On the software end, they have a significant lead over everybody right now. Going forward, they need to do a good job of courting developers to the app store. They also should open up the SDK a little more to some of the lower-level parts of the phone to widen the range of what app developers can make, while leaving the simplicity of development they currently have available. Right now graphics-intensive games like many of the ones running on the iPhone are basically out of bounds, but you could build a simple app in about the same time you could on the web, which is pretty exciting.

I can’t wait to see where they go from here.

But If We Started Dating It Would Ruin Our Friendship Where I Ask You To Do Things And You Do Them | The Onion – America's Finest News Source

Posted in Me Thinking So You Don't Have To on June 10, 2009 by themaroon
But If We Started Dating It Would Ruin Our Friendship Where I Ask You To Do Things And You Do Them

Wow does this one hit the satirical nail on the head. How many guys do you know trapped in this sort of story? I count 2.

Stanley Cup Finals Game 5

Posted in Me Thinking So You Don't Have To on June 6, 2009 by themaroon

– Sent from my Palm Pre

Hockey Is A Grind

Posted in Uncategorized on June 2, 2009 by themaroon

Like all Wings fans, I’ve been watching a lot of hockey lately. After talking to a number of friends, all of whom are very into sports (much more so than me) and none of whom would watch it over a regular season baseball game, I started to wonder why.

It’s not as if I played hockey frequently. Unless you grew up in Alaska or maybe the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, if you’re an American you’ve probably played hockey at most twice in your life. We used to play it in gym (minus the skates of course) on recess a lot in grade school, but I only vaguely remember that, so that’s probably not it.

At first I thought maybe it was my contrarian nature, but then if that were the case, I’d like soccer, or maybe curling, both of which I find borderline retarded. And the only other sport I’ll watch on purpose is football, which isn’t exactly unpopular in the U.S.

But after watching the Red Wings and Sidney Crosby play once again, I realized what it is. Hockey is a grind. That’s what I like about it. It’s also part of why it’s not very popular.

Both poker and startups have made me appreciate what it’s like to be a grinder. Grinding is working hard day after day, toiling in anonymity (or, in hockey’s case, as close as you get to it in major professional sports) while focusing on doing everything and each time doing it all a little better than you did the day before.

It isn’t sexy. It’s not about making plays happen, and showing up on highlight reels. LeBron James isn’t a grinder. Tiger Woods isn’t a grinder. Tom Brady isn’t a grinder either. Sidney Crosby is a grinder (and maybe the best). The Detroit Red Wings are a whole team of grinders.

The highlight reels and video games don’t really show the grinders in action. They might show the occasional Crosby goal, but they don’t show him grinding all game long to get that one puck into the back of the net. They just show the final product, the same way that televised poker skips 100 little hands of pushing and pulling and setting each other up and jostling for position, and just shows the one big all-in at the end.

But hockey’s really about the grind. The Evgeni Malkin breakaway or the Alex Ovechkin one-timer looks better on SportsCenter’s Countdown, but that’s not how the goals are usually scored. The goals are scored by grinding. The points come when one team, through sheer force of will, sends a barrage of shots through the opposing defenders. It’s a big messy pile and you have a hard time telling who’s got the puck when you’re watching on TV, but you see one collision after another, and people are falling down and flailing blindly with their sticks, the commentators are yelling, and the goalie has to get down on the ice to block a shot. Just then, lo and behold, rebound number two or three pops out of the crease, and a guy like Sidney Crosby, the grinder who probably took the first shot and passed to the guy who took the second, just happens to have his stick in the right place at the right time to get a wrist shot into the back of the net.

That’s hockey. In the game where players play 45 second shifts, because the game is just too brutal to play any longer (common wisdom is that anything longer than a minute can ruin a player’s performance for the entire game) it’s the grinders that win in the end.

And that’s why Detroit is so good, they’re a whole team of grinders. They don’t have any Ovechkin-type superstars. They don’t have a couple guys who’d be the best player on just about any team they went to, but nearly every one of their guys would be top 10. They’re not a flashy team, they’re just a bunch of really hard workers that get the job done. Pavel Datsyuk, arguably their best player (though on that team it’s hard to tell) got injured in the playoffs, and they went ahead and won 4 out of the next 5 games anyway.

That’s why hockey appeals to me, because in the end the team that works smarter and harder wins. Unlike baseball, they have a salary cap, so a hockey team can’t just buy up every superstar. Unlike basketball, just having the league’s best player alone isn’t enough to propel you to the finals (though in the East it might get you close).

I’ve got tickets to Game 5 in Detroit Saturday. I’m really hoping I’ll get to see the final octopus flung onto the ice. There’s a pretty good chance Fleury gets his act together, the two teams split the next two games in Pittsburgh, and then Pavel Datsyuk comes back itching to show why he’s nominated for the Hart Trophy and I get to see the cup awarded.

See Mee on Supercool Startup School

Posted in Me Thinking So You Don't Have To on June 1, 2009 by themaroon

I’m doing an interview tonight with Startup School. You should be able to view it here. I’m guessing the primary topics will be startups, social media, and the like, but it’s really up to the interviewer and viewers who get to ask questions.

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