Posts Tagged ‘fashion0mg’

Panoramio is no longer available

Monday, January 28th, 2019

http://www.panoramio.com/

QT:

Thoughts on Storify’s EOL StorifyEOL

Saturday, January 6th, 2018

## The Event

https://www.fastcompany.com/40506878/why-the-once-darling-social-service-storify-is-coming-to-an-end

https://storify.com/faq-eol

## Related to Tech Fashion ideas in

http://info.gersteinlab.org/SF_Chron_Oped_on_Geek_Chic_from_Other_Papers_for_M_Gerstein

## Potential Replacements

https://twitter.com/twexlist

https://www.quora.com/What-tools-exist-to-organize-my-Twitter-favorites-Id-love-to-be-able-to-group-them-into-music-to-check-out-links-to-check-out-people-to-check-outor-perhaps-tag-them-with-a-subject-so-I-can-more-easily-go-through-them

## More

https://linkstream2.gerstein.info/tag/StorifyEOL

A “right to repair” movement tools up – If it’s broken, you can’t fix it

Friday, November 10th, 2017

A “right to repair” movement tools up – If it’s broken, you can’t fix
it https://www.Economist.com/news/business/21729744-tractors-smartphones-mending-things-getting-ever-harder-right-repair-movement Is ownership actually another form of leasing?

Google discontinues the RSS feed from Google Calendars

Wednesday, June 14th, 2017

$GOOGL ends #gcal RSS & public #photos homepage; thought I could trust it for stability
https://ProductForums.Google.com/forum/#!msg/photos/8QqjlFdYzyc/1_YCwkYWBwAJ
+ https://www.404TechSupport.com/2015/10/06/google-discontinue-feed-google-calendars/ On Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 10:54 PM, Mark Gerstein wrote:

Software or softwear?

Sunday, February 19th, 2017

#Software or softwear?
https://www.1843magazine.com/style/software-or-softwear Appears fashions change faster for computers than clothes. Cf
http://www.SFChronicle.com/opinion/openforum/article/Going-beyond-geek-chic-CeBIT-6883249.php?t=a28a0bfcd600af33be&cmpid=twitter-premium

QT:{{”
For years now I’ve written about fancy-schmancy clothes, shoes and bags. I’ve visited factories and ateliers across Europe to observe artisans make Hermès bags, Kiton suits, Berluti jeans, Tod’s loafers, Mulberry luggage, Private White VC jackets, John Lobb Oxfords, Brunello Cucinelli sweaters – and much more besides. I love watching skilled craftsmen going about their business, then trying to explain the process in print without resorting to hype.

But buying the stuff? Despite my privileged access and my love of beautiful things, whenever push comes to shoving my hand into my pocket and slapping down the moolah, I tend to cringe: £600 ($750) for a pair of shoes? A £900 coat? A £3,000 watch? Uh-uh.

I tell myself that my hesitation is based on prudence. I’ve got kids to feed, after all, and the closest I’ve come to planning for the future is booking a hotel in Paris. Yet when it comes to another retail category that dominates this golden age of consumer capitalism – personal technology – it’s another story.

Ever since my childish paws first caressed the orange plastic contours of my beloved Texas Instruments Speak & Spell, I’ve been a sucker for a screen, a shutter-click or a bleep. From my first computer (an Amstrad CPC464), first camera (a Pentax me Super) and first mobile phone (a Sony Ericsson whose model number eludes me – maybe it fried the relevant synapse), I can chart each period in my life according to the hardware I was using. And I’ve never felt anything but virtuous about forking out when the cash was, briefly, in hand. Why? Because personal tech is the toolbox of 21st-century life. It empowers. It frees. It improves.

But last month I had an epiphany. It happened as I sat in the Genius Bar of an Apple store feeling stupid, paying £300 to repair the suddenly blank screen of a laptop purchased not much more than a year earlier. The cheery Genius at hand had told me that in my position, he’d probably just buy a new computer: “but that’s just me”, he said, “I always want the latest model.”

Briefly, that technophile, Pavlovian response kicked in: woof! Lead me to the newest, most expensive version! But it was swiftly replaced by a howl of inner fury.

More and more, I observe technology companies adopting the marketing strategies of luxury-goods firms. Sure, their narrative focuses not on heritage or trends, but on incremental upgrades in processing speeds, peripheral capabilities and software compatibility. Yet many companies talk just as enthusiastically about design as functionality, and propose that owning their products is a declaration of personal identity. Each new launch inevitably presents whatever product is being pitched as the ne plus ultra of its type – a big fat lie that becomes ever more glaring as the cycle of enforced obsolescence spins faster and faster.

I’ve spent the last week or so sifting through my personal archive of the obsolete: à la recherche du tech perdu. From tangles of cable and brick-like batteries I’ve excavated minidisc players (Sanyo!), BlackBerrys, Nokias, ThinkPads, iMacs, a Google Glass, Coolpix and more. None, of course, is fit for purpose now, unless you’re going to a “Back to the Future” party.”
“}}

GPS4CAM

Tuesday, July 5th, 2016

http://gps4cam.com/

Somewhat superior is:
http://www.geotagphotos.net/

Useful w/ demise of eyefi

NCBI retiring HapMap Resource

Friday, July 1st, 2016

Worrisome in rel. to #reproducibleresearch & maintaining secure resources https://twitter.com/adamauton/status/745304911483535360 … #saveHapMap Cf http://papers.gersteinlab.org/papers/security

@adamauton: Even as a @1000genomes advocate, this is not cool: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/variation/news/NCBI_retiring_HapMap/ #saveHapMap

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/variation/news/NCBI_retiring_HapMap/

About relied-on webservice or software pulling the plug on a loyal userbase…

Friday, March 25th, 2016

About relied-on webservice or software pulling the plug on a loyal userbase… & how to respond to it!

http://info.gersteinlab.org/SF_Chron_Oped_on_Geek_Chic_from_Other_Papers_for_M_Gerstein

http://info.gersteinlab.org/SF_Chron_Oped_on_gcode_from_Other_Papers_for_M_Gerstein

Picasa Blog: Moving on from Picasa

Saturday, March 19th, 2016

Moving on from #Picasa
http://GooglePhotos.blogspot.com/2016/02/moving-on-from-picasa.html Another highly used software falling out of fashion, disrupting many users’ workflows

Moving on to Lightroom?

Another example of Geek Chic:
http://www.SFChronicle.com/Opinion/openforum/article/Going-beyond-geek-chic-CeBIT-6883249.php?t=a28a0bfcd600af33be&cmpid=twitter-premium

The Economist explains: Why fashion week is passé | The Economist

Thursday, March 10th, 2016

Why #fashion week is passé
http://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2016/03/economist-explains-5?fsrc=scn/tw/te/bl/ed/whyfashionweekispass Technology is making the timing of big shows irrelevant