Joe Maller.com

Real Advertising War Stories at The One Club

NYC Creative Director leaves clients and staff in NYC, moves to Kabul to help establish the first communication agency in the country since before the Taliban. Is she a sadist, uniquely qualified for the task, or simply and blindly optimistic?

On June 21 at 7 pm in The One Club Gallery, Sharoz Makarechi of Think Tank 3, recently back from the trenches, will share advertising stories from war-torn Afghanistan and discuss the value of ideas, cross media thinking, and creative communication campaigns in a society struggling to recover from over 25 years of war.

That would be my friend Sharoz. It’s hard to put into words how much I respect and admire her courage. I feel lucky to know such an exceptional person.

Update: Kabob!


Links for June 15, 2005


Links for June 4, 2005


Rumor overdrive

So the WWDC rumor mill just went into turbo-super-maximum overdrive.

CNET: Apple to ditch IBM, switch to Intel chips

Yeah, CNET is supposed to be pretty legit, as these things go. As would be expected, the MacRumors forums are abuzz, most interesting speculation is that Intel starts making a PPC-style CPU.

An ironic point, if true: Apple will be running on Intel. Microsoft will be running on IBM G5s. (OK, a sorta G5-ish tri-core CPU)

Not sure what to make of any of this. Mac-Intel rumors have been around forever. The technology isn’t really an issue, between OSX’s hardware abstraction and Apple’s excellent development tools, most apps should be able to migrate in a reasonable amount of time. The bigger problem is inventory and future sales. Who’s going to buy a dead-end computer? If everyone knows they’re switching chips (and if they do announce this, everyone will know), the hit on existing inventory and interim sales would be astronomical. If this is true, I hope they have a lot of cash in the bank.

How would the market react? Bump Apple up huge on the news until calmer heads point out the sales hit? Shares fall immediately based on the sales hit but recover to higher levels after a few months? Apple got hammered on Friday because of rumors of too much inventory, I really need to find a way to get quotes on my phone via SMS.
Whatever happens, I’m getting really psyched for the keynote.


WWDC

Apple’s WWDC starts next week and the rumor sites are uncharacteristically quiet even though Steve Jobs’ keynote is only four days away. It’s very unlikely we’ll see any talk about 10.5, since 10.4 just shipped and there are a ton of wrinkles to iron out. I’m expecting to see a lot of new hardware development, or else a two hour buzzkill Tiger demo. There are 18 TBA sessions scheduled including at least one in the big room, so something new is likely to be announced.

The past year seems like it’s been a good for hardware innovation. Now that AMD and Intel both have multicore and 64bit chips in the market the G5 doesn’t seem as competitive as it was two years ago (not to mention being two years overdue for 3ghz). IBM’s Cell Processor is another unknown, but arguments could be made about cramming one into a PowerBook. A friend with reasonably good contacts thinks we’re going to finally see a G5 PowerBook. I hope so, and my credit card is ready to go. Hopefully we’ll at least get that Powerbook HD referenced by the typo in the current PowerBook manuals. And maybe PowerBooks will do a little better to close the speed gap with desktops (or at least iMacs). According to MacRumors Buyer’s Guide, Powerbooks will be 126 days into their product cycle and iBooks will be overdue for a refresh at 230 days. Seems like a good time to announce new portables, especially since nearly everyone at the conference is carrying one.

The tracks seem a lot more technical this year, which is good. The previous two years I ended up in several sessions where I was bored or didn’t learn anything.

My primary goals for this year are a bit more modest than last year. First, I’m focusing on related technologies to FXScript, FCP and graphics stuff. This includes all the pro-video apps, especially Motion and the Shake SDK, plus the Quartz Composer labs. I’m still very interested in CoreImage and CoreVideo, but there aren’t very many of those sessions scheduled.

I have a feeling I’d be bored by too many Dashboard sessions since I’m pretty good with JavaScript and CSS and don’t really have any ideas for widgets that haven’t been done already. Unix scripting and shell commands will be a focus, I’d like to see how other people work with them since I taught myself and feel like I’m often stumbling around.

The best thing I got last year was better programming practices, so I’ll be making a more deliberate effort to be in sessions related to source-code control, development tools and better working methods.

Aside from that, I’m hoping to pick up a bit of Cocoa, get over the AppleScript Studio hump, and find more fascinating stuff that doesn’t fly too far over my head.

Wednesday’s Brown Bag Lunches are a problem because I want to attend three of them; Python Today with the language’s creator Guido van Rossum, PHP on a PowerBook with that language’s creator Rasmus Lerdorf and the MySQL and SQLite lunch with author Brian Jepson. I’ll probably be at either the PHP or Python lunch, PHP because I’ve done a lot of work with it, Python because I’ve been meaning to learn it. Thursday I’m going to the Advanced Scripting with brian_d_foy, who I’m looking forward to meeting.

I’ll also be attending Buzz Andersen’s WWDC 2005 Weblogger Dinner on Monday night. Looking forward to meeting a bunch of people there.


Shape of Days Voyage 2005

Jeff Harrell at Shape of Days is posting a great set of very personal, insightful travel essays from his vacation/voyage through the Florida Keys. Here they are in order:


Links for June 1, 2005



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