Flicker Fusion

People who yell at the waiter

People who yell at the waiter

Ron Lieber, a writer for the New York Times, got kicked out of a restaurant for confronting the chef about the way he was treating his staff. I think he did the right thing and would like to think I’d have the courage to do the same.

As someone who cares about food and thinks about food a lot, I cringe when I hear these stories. I worry that we’ve elevated this basic maslovian need to cult status, that the high priests are above reproach as long as they get results. When millions of us sit down and watch Gordon Ramsay swear his way through an hour of competitive cooking, what does that do to our expectations? Did no one else at the restaurant stand up to say anything because that’s how we expect chefs to behave now? Were they even entertained by the spectacle, a bloodless gladiatorial pre-meal show complete with free dessert for anyone whose sensibilities may have been offended?

Precision and even art are worthy goals in any endeavor, cooking is no exception. When that drives us to the point where we forgo basic decency and humanity, it’s gone too far.

Oh, but we’re very, very busy zombies. We’re reading e-mail… tweeting and retweeting…downloading apps..uploading photos…updating our status and reading our news feeds…You know what we’re not doing? We’re not thinking. We’re processing. There’s a difference.

Oh, but we’re very, very busy zombies. We’re reading e-mail… tweeting and retweeting…downloading apps..uploading photos…updating our status and reading our news feeds…

You know what we’re not doing? We’re not thinking. We’re processing. There’s a difference.

catbird said: I agree with this, and it reminds me of my worry about the iPad— what Apple has launched is a device solely for consuming, with “creating” thrown right out the window. And my guess is that even typing something longer than, say, a text-message on it is a huge pain in the ass. I mean, what are you supposed to do, lay it flat on your lap, pull your elbows back then gnarl your hands into claws? That right there has gotta be strong impetus to stop “interacting” on the web and just fall back to “clicking on shit.”

I found this opinion a bit surprising, especially coming from Ryan Catbird. Or perhaps just the tone. Regardless, it’s the latest of a few pieces I’ve seen out there that single out the iPad or any other number of devices or services as responsible for dumbing us down; the linked article by Newsweek’s Dan “Fake Steve Jobs” Lyons is referring to none other than Barack Obama’s calling out the information age in a commencement speech last weekend.

Of course, aiming for the convenient soundbite or the latest fad is as much contributing to the problem of information noise as it is attempting to solve it. The iPad gets criticized time and again for being a device built solely for consuming, but I’ve already created vastly more content on my iPad than I ever will on that static, creaking piece of furniture that’s been in every living room in the world for 60 years. Twitter is easily labeled as a distraction, but nearly every new friend (and let’s not forget that wonderful, beautiful woman who makes me a better man every day) I’ve made in the past three years has started there.

Wrangling the staggering amount of information that is exponentially piling up around us may well be the great challenge of our generation, certainly for those of us who do this for a living. It’s a challenge I’d rather face.

Print’s value is increasing with its scarcity

Print’s value is increasing with its scarcity

What we thought we were paying for in newspapers was all the news that was in them. In fact, the main role of the newspaper was to decide what to leave out.

This perfectly describes the friction in the news business today. Old media doesn’t know how to scale their best asset and the technology that’s replacing it doesn’t know how to distill an editor to an algorithm. Yet. Each is hoping to get there first while paying some deference to the other just in case.

Ross is exactly spot on here, not just for his rather astute point but for the precise and eloquent way he says it. If you’re at all interested in the tectonic shifts happening in media, Ross should be at the top of your reading list.

Wallpaper

A bit ago, I quipped about how I don’t really like the new wallpaper feature in iPhone OS 4. For some reason, it doesn’t bug me much on my iPad but on the phone it’s awful, especially the vibrant images that ship by default.

So I made a better one. Originally, I just wanted my black background back but decided to add just a touch of panaché – a little Fireball Gray rising from the bottom. It’s nothing fancy and was all of a few minutes of dinking around in Acorn to get the gradient just right. No logos or icons getting in the way.

Right-click and save fanboy.jpg to wherever it is your phone looks for photos on your computer or, if you’re reading this on your phone, just go there and save with a tap-hold. Do with it what you will, no rights reserved on my part. Now breathe a sweet sigh of relief.