Thoughts on tethering

The Trouble with Tethering - Features - features.engadget.com

This is posting a fairly interesting rant on "tethering"... the process of tying an add-on product to the base product you bought. Of course, way back in the day, this was called the "razor/razor blade" model, but the concept is the same.

You buy some underlying piece of technology. Then, when you want to use/refill that technology, you have one place to go. This is endlessly irritating in a number of areas (cell phone batteries, laptop rechargers, Voltron), but from the engineer's perspective, it makes a lot of sense.

If someone wants to add something on after the product is released, let her look at the design of the product and design it herself. From the original designer's point of view, it's tough enough getting the product out the door without taking into account the after market. Plus, allowing full design freedom up front offers endless flexibility for the designer to manage the details of her product. If she had to worry about the 0.1 V difference between the "standard" charger and a capacitor she needs to add, her product would ultimately suffer.

The benefits tend to break down when it comes to software. The effort required to snap pieces of software together is much lower than creating a product in bulk that uses real materials and getting it working with an existing product. The majority of the work to prevent two pieces of software from working together resides with the producer of the original software rather than the follower. Some people build entire businesses out of getting things software to work together (Windows is basically a small program with a very large amount of work in getting other things to work on it) while some people and businesses spend an enormous amount of time making sure nothing can work with their products (as in the article, Apple and Real... those copy protected music CDs are another example). <o:p> </o:p>

The logic for the business is very sound (they would prefer that people buy their products rather than after market add-ons) but, unfortunately, the customer can suffer higher prices and reduced choice as well as tying herself to the fortunes of the company. However, if the company continues chugging along, providing all the services that customer requires at a reasonable price, she is unaffected by the lock-in. At that point, the customer only suffers if she changes technology. I am not sure how frequently the former scenario happens.<o:p></o:p>

As for the latter, I believe people switch MUCH less than they think. I've always gotten the impression that people have no idea how frequently they change anything (houses, brands, coffee makers, spouses, etc), either on the low or the high side! Very frequently people look at the openness of a product (especially in the computer world) with the expectation that they’ll be doing a thousand different things and may need to change brands at any moment. Yet it rarely happens. And because people are constantly afraid of getting locked in in that way, they frequently will pay a premium for the services which free them from that lock in. This premium is usually a complete waste of money. <o:p></o:p>

First, even if you buy something that supposes to offer portability, the products rarely work without some degree of work. This usually negates the "savings" the consumer paid for upfront. Second, people never really look at how much of a product they actually use. To the linked example of the coffee maker, I’d be willing to bet that in two year’s time, the thing is in the corner gathering dust because the purchaser either a) has a new one, b) it broke c) he does not use it any more or d) all of the above. For those of you driving around in SUVs that have all that extra room because you never know when you want to pick up a credenza at a garage sale, I invite you to do the following math: <o:p> </o:p>

$20,000 car + 1000 gallons of gas (for 30,000 miles traveled) @ $2.00/gallon + $49/day for a rented pickup truck * 3 days + $49/day for rented SUV for off-roading * 3 days
<o:p></o:p>
vs.

$35,000 SUV + 2000 gallons of gas (for 30,000 miles traveled) @ $2.00/gallon<o:p></o:p>

I’m not against big vehicles; I am just for people buying what they need based on actually what they need rather than what they think they need (since they are very rarely accurate about predicting what they need).<o:p></o:p>

Everything Funny dot Com presents News from Iraq with subtitles

Everything Funny dot Com presents News from Iraq with subtitles

This is really funny stuff. But it actually highlights something I've always thought... I think it is fairly insulting to put subtitles under someone who is speaking English. ESPECIALLY in a movie or taped program. If you are going to have the character speak English, why don't you have them rehearse a bit? Otherwise, why don't you have them speak their original language and put in subtitles?

New credit card will not work on the Sabbath

MSNBC - New credit card for Jews won't work on Sabbath

COME ON. Why would there ever be a market here? Do you really need a credit card to enforce this? Anyone who can have a credit card could have another credit card that would work. And further, this only works with stores that are closed, since all stores have this wonderful thing invented about a hundred years ago called carbon paper as a backup. Ultimately, this just comes down to self control. Or, as I just mentioned to my friend, "I know I could stay out of the fridge if I just did not go in the room, but instead, would you mind attaching this shackle to my ball sack?"

Continuing story on how very few of us dictate what most of us see

Activists Dominate Content Complaints

Apparently, Mr. Powell is among the politicians I mention earlier who do not bother to do any kind of detailed analysis of data. 99.9% of of the indecency complaints are by a single agency! Nice that such a small percentage of the populace are dictating to the rest of us what we can watch, listen to and see.

My favorite is this quote:
Even as some question whether the FCC should let the views of 23 people lead to fines, others take the agency to task for routinely failing to account for many of the complaints it receives. “Over 4,000 people filed a complaint against Married by America. Where do the complaints go?” asked the PTC’s Mahaney.
If the FCC does not keep accurate count, how would she know how many people filed complaints against the program if she (or someone in her organization) was not filing the complaints herself? And if they are, unless they have an organization of 2.55 million people, she represents less than 50% of the people who watched the program. Which means she does not get to say shit (literally or figuratively I suppose).

Seagate Ships 400-GB Drive

Seagate Ships 400-GB Drive

I think this may be the first time that a drive has come out new that has cost less than $1 per GB when new.

Man disk space is cheap. I've started ripping all my CDs in lossless format, because otherwise how would I take up all that space? While the space is nice, it's kind of like a hammer. It's not really useful until someone figures out how to use it all. What that will be, I do not know.

At 128 kbps you could store about 900 hours of straight sound.
Average movie converted to digital is a couple of GB... so here you could store 200.

And so on... if you're doing a lot of data work, this is great, but I'm still not sure what the average user would use this for (besides porn).

Electoral Vote Floor Effect

I've been doing a little math (and a lot of formatting) and I was fascinated by the floor effect of the current electoral vote system. This would not have affected the past election, but it certainly would have affected the strategy by each of the teams.
State           Population  EV  EV/Pop      Vote
Texas           22,118,509  34  0.0000015    Rep
California      35,484,453  55  0.0000015    Dem
Florida         17,019,068  27  0.0000016    Rep
New York        19,190,115  31  0.0000016    Dem
Illinois        12,653,544  21  0.0000017    Dem
Michigan        10,079,985  17  0.0000017    Dem
Pennsylvania    12,365,455  21  0.0000017    Dem
Georgia         8,684,715       15  0.0000017    Rep
New Jersey      8,638,396       15  0.0000017    Dem
Ohio            11,435,798  20  0.0000017    Rep
Virginia        7,386,330       13  0.0000018    Rep
Indiana         6,195,643       11  0.0000018    Rep
NC              8,407,248       15  0.0000018    Rep
Arizona         5,580,811       10  0.0000018    Rep
Washington      6,131,445       11  0.0000018    Dem
Maryland        5,508,909       10  0.0000018    Dem
Wisconsin       5,472,299       10  0.0000018    Dem
MA              6,433,422       12  0.0000019    Dem
Tennessee       5,841,748       11  0.0000019    Rep
Missouri        5,704,484       11  0.0000019    Rep
SC              4,147,152       8  0.0000019    Rep
Kentucky        4,117,827       8  0.0000019    Rep
Oregon          3,559,596       7  0.0000020    Dem
Minnesota       5,059,375       10  0.0000020    Dem
Colorado        4,550,688       9  0.0000020    Rep
Oklahoma        3,511,532       7  0.0000020    Rep
Alabama         4,500,752       9  0.0000020    Rep
Louisiana       4,496,334       9  0.0000020    Rep
Connecticut     3,483,372       7  0.0000020    Dem
Mississippi     2,881,281       6  0.0000021    Rep
Utah            2,351,467       5  0.0000021    Rep
Arkansas        2,725,714       6  0.0000022    Rep
Kansas          2,723,507       6  0.0000022    Rep
Nevada          2,241,154       5  0.0000022    Rep
Iowa            2,944,062       7  0.0000024    Rep
New Mexico      1,874,614       5  0.0000027    Rep
WV              1,810,354       5  0.0000028    Rep
Nebraska        1,739,291       5  0.0000029    Rep
Idaho           1,366,332       4  0.0000029    Rep
Maine           1,305,728       4  0.0000031    Dem
NH              1,287,687       4  0.0000031    Dem
Hawaii          1,257,608       4  0.0000032    Dem
Montana         917,621         3  0.0000033    Rep
Delaware        817,491         3  0.0000037    Dem
Rhode Island    1,076,164       4  0.0000037    Dem
South Dakota    764,303         3  0.0000039    Rep
Alaska          648,813         3  0.0000046    Rep
Vermont         609,890         3  0.0000049    Rep
DC              574,096         3  0.0000052    Dem
Wyoming         495,304         3  0.0000061    Rep

.

Yes, these are not voting populations, but for the sake of argument, let's assume that an equal percentage of voters vote in each states. Because each of the states must have a minimum of 3 electoral votes, citizens in very small states have a much greater effect on the election than those in large states do. For instance, my vote is worth (in electoral votes) roughly 1/2 of a person's vote in Delaware, almost 1/3 as much as someone from Alaska and nearly 1/4th as much as someone from Wyoming! It is possible to say that those from smaller states (14 out of the bottom 20 least populous states voted Republican) have far more a say in the election than those in the top ten in population (5 out of the top 10 voted Republican). It did not make a difference this time (a reweighted measure came up with 279 to 259 (approximately, due to rounding error)), but it certainly does make an interesting case for electoral college elimination/reform. It also says that in the current environment, simply writing off a large amount of the smaller states (which the Democrats did) is a real mistake.

UPDATED: Added a link, some grammar and the caveat about voting population.

UPDATED AGAIN: Needed to fix layout in IE.