is Useful
Interaction Design, Social Networks & Usability
is Useful
Today is No Music Day
It's official, today is 'No Music Day'. Well, on Radio Scotland anyway.
Bill Drummond, musical genius, artist and one part of the trancendent KLF, is hosting his third yearly 'No Music Day' on Radio Scotland today. There can be chat, discussion and many other things, but not music. His rationale is simple; there's just too much of it these days, and it's hard to appreciate what there is without taking a break. Too true.
Unfortunately I'd already started the day listening to music, so maybe next year I'll join in. Although maybe by then I'll have my own, personal day of abstinence in place - No Internet Day - which will be the day I get most work done I'm sure.
Labels: Genius, Music Industry, Social Change
Weak Wireless Signal on MacBook Pro
My MacBook Pro is lovely, but even Macs have problems. Yes, it's true. Recently I was traveling in England and stayed at a lovely B & B in Edinburgh (The Sandaig which I highly recommend!). There was free wi-fi, always a bonus, but unfortunately I could rarely seem to get on it for more than a few seconds before it booted me off. My partner's laptop, a MacBook, seemed to connect just fine with rapid connection speeds even with only two bars of signal. This situation was highly frustrating - as we're both excessive Internet users, so only having one active laptop was a pain. I mean, what were we going to do instead? Visit Edinburgh's beautiful sights? Pah.
The solution turned out to be a non-solution, but rather a clarification of how MacBook Pros work. It turns out from a bit of research that the beautiful aluminium case that surrounds the MacBook Pro forms a Faraday cage - which is relatively impervious to radio waves such as wireless internet connections. Ah. Apple's solution to this was to leave a 'hole' in this cage, where the laptop is not made of aluminium, and that is the rubbery looking strip you see just underneath the laptop screen. That strip is your wireless antenna.
Now compared to a normal MacBook, which can pick up un-impeded signal from all directions, this means your new MacBook Pro not only has a very small area through which to receive signals, it is also highly directional. Ah hah. So now you have the following options to improve your wireless reception when you have a weak signal:
- Plug in your MacBook Pro: When you have a power supply connected the wireless power ramps up and you'll see a huge improvement in reception. Unfortunately you can't seem to configure this manually when you don't have a power supply to hand, so I guess it sucks battery super fast.
- Point your MacBook Pro in different directions: Use your laptop like a divining rod to find the direction of strongest signal. Given the small window available this can yield good enough results but it is a pain to move around.
- Move closer to the wireless source so you get a stronger signal. Obviously not the most useful solution but sometimes the only one. In my case moving outside of our room, past a solid brick wall, gave four bars of signal and perfect internet.
Come on Apple - next generation of MacBook Pros admit your short fallings and add a nice external connector for an antenna or similar. I'm sure your legions of product eco-system partners will jump on the opportunity to create many beautiful and functional designs, something this time you omitted to do.
Labels: Apple, MacBook, MacBook Issue
Squidoo - Crowd Sourced SEO Friendliness
For some reason that escapes me now I started to spend a few hours playing around with Squidoo to create my own 'lens' on Smorkin' Labbits, those cute little collectible rabbits that smoke. Squidoo was created by Seth Godin, amongst others, to enable experts (and fans) with minimal internet experience to create, manage and write their own spiel about the subjects they love. It's sort of a crowd-sourced About.com, with the added fun of having to identify spam type posts.
The overall experience of creating my lens was straight-forward and powerful, although I found that one limitation of Squidoo is that it doesn't like you uploading pictures to make lists - something that I really wanted to do to list out the colourful little toys. The solution: create a false Flickr account, upload my pictures there, then hand transfer every image URL since the 'Plaxo' image grabbing code seems not to be working right now. Ug. What's interesting now is whether or not I make any money off this activity, as Squidoo borrows another crowd sourced site idea (ePinions') to share any affiliate revenues they make with us, the creators. Somehow I think the percentage payback on a $5 plastic toy ain't so great, but guess that's why all the camera focussed lenses are already highly developed.
Labels: Crowd Sourced, Long Tail, marketing
Spare a Penny for a Poor Rock Band
The first set of 'statistics' have turned up from Radiohead's innovative "choose your price" sale of their In Rainbows album. As you may recall, Radiohead decided to let their listeners choose a price to download the album - anywhere from nothing to £99.99 (+ 45p handling fee). Now comscore are claiming an indication of how much people have paid, but purely based on a survey they carried out.
Comscore reckon the average price paid was £2.90 - with US customers paying more than the rest of the world, averaging £3.85 compared with £2.22 elsewhere. Obviously this is a lot lower than the usual price of a CD, but consider how much of that money is now going direct to Radiohead and not a middleman... 100%. Plus one thing that Comscore doesn't indicate is how many albums have been sold so far, only Radiohead and their partners know that for sure. Either way it seems that their experiment has been a success.
As an aside, In Rainbows is a wonderful album full of great songs - so go get your copy now, at a price that feels good to you.
Labels: Disruption, Distribution Models, Music Industry
All opinions expressed on this site are solely those of Matt Hobbs and do not reflect any official position of his employers.