radiant.matrix

A collection of thoughts and links from the minds of geeks

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Category: Random Thoughts

Just random things I feel like sharing

Deep fried apples

29 September, 2008 (15:57) | Random Thoughts | By: radiantmatrix

Continuing the theme of turning healthy snacks into deadly artery bombs, an apple was sliced, battered, and fried. What emerged from the oil was something so delicious it made Mother Nature weep at her own incompetence in the face of what man hath wrought. — Skepchick: Critical Thinking at its Finest

A language both elegant and terrifying

9 July, 2008 (17:50) | Random Thoughts | By: radiantmatrix

It’s as if H.P. Lovecraft, returned from the dead and speaking by seance to Larry Wall, designed a language both elegant and terrifying for his Elder Things to write programs in… — Matt Olson, asr

And people wonder why I love Perl. ;-)

I can’t tell if he’s joking…

2 July, 2008 (13:30) | Random Thoughts | By: radiantmatrix

In response to Buy n Large to Brand Direction “North”, John Gruber writes:

What’s next, the Year of the Depends Adult Undergarment? Jiminy.– DaringFireball

I can’t tell if he knows that “Buy n Large” is the pretend company from Wall-E or not. Were you kidding, John, or did you really think someone was trying to brand a compass direction?

Security through constant change

27 June, 2008 (10:33) | Random Thoughts | By: radiantmatrix

The search for static security - in the law and elsewhere - is misguided. The fact is security can only be achieved through constant change, adapting old ideas that have outlived their usefulness to current facts. — Henry Miller

Daring Fireball: Sixty-Six

28 May, 2008 (12:47) | Random Thoughts | By: radiantmatrix

So from 18 to 66 percent in two years — in what had seemed until very recently a relatively old and stable market. In short: people who care about computers, at least insofar as “caring” means “spending over $1000”, are switching to Macs. Interesting. — John Gruber, Daring Fireball: Sixty-Six

Yes, that is interesting. However, there’s a lot of buried complexity that just doesn’t come out in the statement above, or the article from which it comes.

First, the “PC market” in general is very hard to define, especially for people who really care about their machines. Purely anecdotal, of course, but most people I know who care deeply about computing build their own machine from parts1 — those numbers are not counted in the PC market-share analysis.

Second, while Apple’s growth in a market segment ($1000+ PCs) is impressive, it’s not very useful information when it comes to observing trends in the overall market. In that regard, I think Mr. Gruber is on the nose when he says:

a simplistic “overall PC market share” number has never been a good metric for gauging the Mac’s success because the “overall PC market” includes millions of commodity-level low-end machines that Apple neither tries nor wants to sell. — John Gruber, Daring Fireball: Sixty-Six

I’d take it a step further, though — I think that the metric is poor because Apple isn’t really a PC company. Apple’s computer products, from design to the way they’re marketed, is so wildly different than the rest of the industry that I’m not sure Apple really even belongs in the set. What you buy from Apple is less computer and more experience.


  1. Those that don’t, though, do seem to buy Macs.