Do you have an iPad and a book support? That’s what I had at home. I had one book support that I didn’t use, it cost 100 yen, it’s about 0.9€ or $1.3 then you need something to stick on it so the iPad won’t slide down.
That’s all :-)
After I read the news about Steve Jobs stepping back as Apple’s CEO, I was going back in time, digging in my memories and experiences, since the first day I started working in an IT company. I came up with a really simple conclusion that needs some explanation. It’s so simple that just saying it, has no effect. But it’s really powerful.
I have a long experience working with workaholics and micromanagers. I’m wrong if I put these two profiles together. A micromanager can be a workaholic but not all workaholics are micromanagers. In fact many of them are not managers at all.
I know how these profiles behave, how they think. I know how to predict many of their actions, in fact they are very predictable. I know how bad they can be for a company, how much they can damage a working environment. Sometimes they can also be useful, but it’s much better if they never have total power and are managed by somebody else that knows exactly what kind of people they’re dealing with. They are not bad or good people, in fact their behavior roots are very complex.
After reading many articles about Steve Jobs, his personality, about glimpses of his life and stories from people that know him; there was something that wasn’t clear to me. He is usually described as a workaholic and a micromanager. Many people now is saying that this, hypothetical “qualities”, are good for a CEO and maybe many people will try to get inspired by those descriptions. Well, I don’t know him, but thinking about what he did and what Apple was doing under his control, makes me think completely different.
I read a story (worth reading) today in Google+, from Vic Gundotra that inspired me to write this post. He talks about Steve Jobs calling him by phone, on a Sunday morning, talking about the yellow gradient of the second O in the Google icon on the iPhone. How do you interpret that? Obviously that Steve is a workaholic and a micromanager. But wait a minute. I’m pretty sure he was right about the yellow gradient of that icon. Nobody else would have changed it, or even care about it. So, who had to do it then? Someone that really cares about doing things well: Steve Jobs.
So let’s think about this from a different approach. Think about all the things you think are really well done, from a refrigerator, a car, a phone, whatever, and put them in one set. Then do the opposite, you will find that it’s much easier to find things that have been just done but not well done. You can have a Windows PC and it can help you to perform common operations on a computer, but if you compare it with a Mac, you will notice the difference. Operations are the same, the purpose is the same but almost every corner in the the Apple machine is well designed or at least, they really tried to do it well, and that’s important.
So, do you think that Steve Jobs behavior can just be classified as a workaholic and a micromanager? If you ever worked with that kind of people, do you think that they can achieve, what Steve did? To be disruptive in technology you need to be able to see the big picture, to make an abstraction of the tiny world that surrounds everyone of us and think differently. Somebody that gets trapped in a compulsive behavior denotes his/her incapacity to perform such abstraction from their environment. So, do you still think that the key is being, apparently, a workaholic and a micromanager? I don’t think so. There is much more behind that. If we look at the root problem, it’s easy to realize that sooner or later somebody has to do things well to achieve success. What if somebody else noticed that the yellow gradient was wrong and was willing to change it? Do you think that Steve would have been there, spending his time taking care even of that tiny detail if everybody took care of details willing to get things well done? I don’t know, maybe, but probably not.
I remember a painful time with a micromanager I worked with years ago. I like to take care about details and get things well done without having a bad impact on production. I didn’t even know that I wanted to do things well, it was just the way I felt comfortable. He was the opposite, he micromanaged me in every possible way, telling me even how to code stuff that he had no idea about. He forced me to take wrong paths because usually a micromanager is a paranoid that thinks that only him is the right guy to do the job. At the end, his interventions were useless and made me waste a lot of time that I could spend improving my work. Later he realized I was right. We still had time to fix it but, as the project worked, his mentality followed with the “who cares, as far as it works!!” mentality.
This mentality is the root of every thing that gets done, but that never will get well done!
This is the big difference. You can improve that icon, setting the right yellow to the second O. It’s not a waste of time. Tiny details make a big difference when they merge in the final product.
If you lead, if you are responsible for a project and you care to get things well done, if you care about details, about the big picture and realize that it’s made by all those tiny insignificant parts, if you just care! If you love to see the job done perfectly and beautifully, but you are alone… what will you become if nobody else cares and think that you are just an obsessive person? You become like Steve Jobs, and, in that case, you have to carry all the weight and do it by yourself.
To conclude: it’s hard for me to believe that he is a real, by nature micromanager. Maybe he is a workaholic and a forced micromanager. Just taking a look to Apple products and how they are always ahead of time from everybody else, gives a clue of what is the behavioral pattern that he wanted to be embedded in the company.
This is the inspiration I want to take from all this. I will always try to keep “getting things well done”. I didn’t really realize about this subtle-different-simple concept before, until now. I loved to see things getting closer to perfection and never reaching it, but I didn’t realize that the main stream just don’t care as far as they are not the consumers.
I’ll keep this in mind for all my applications. Even if it’s a free app, even if it’s just a prototype, even if the app produces no profit at all, adding a little constant effort and just having the will to take care of the whole thing, keeping in mind that a perfect whole is made by it’s tiny perfect parts, is the most important quality to get things well done.
If you are not a pro and you are about to buy a new good camera, I’m sure you will ask advice before you spend a good slice of your salary on a piece of hardware.
The first advice is “Don’t listen to fanboys!” This is not only an advice before you buy a camera, but in general. There are two kind of fanboys, the one that just likes a vendor and consider every camera just a tool to accomplish what at the end is the only important thing: take a picture!
Then the other fanboy an extremist fanatic one. Try to avoid his/her advice because for them, the brand is just a kind of religion or a way of living. For them there is no better camera than the one they love, and you are looking for an objective advice before you spend your money right? So you’ve been warned.
So here some advices for non pro users, before you buy a new camera:
It’s pretty well know that Google+ doesn’t allow people to use nicknames in their profiles. They claim that this will protect users from the “bad intentions” of evil hackers or spammers. This is just nonsense. This basically shows a lack of understanding of what a nick name means and how the use of a nickname can harm users.
If someone want to be anonymous with the intention to do something bad and get undiscovered, the worst thing to do is using a nickname. That romantic idea of a dangerous hacker with a cool nickname, chased by authorities, working in the night in humid and dirty abandoned apartments is unreal… This is not Hollywood! Matrix was just a movie… Hello! Google, knock knock please wake up…
In real life, far before Internet, people used and still use what is called a “fake identity” to make the task of authorities harder. I suggest to see this movie to understand what being an anonymous outlaw means. This means using a fake name, a name that looks real but it’s not a real one.
So is Google really checking if the name in the profile of some user is the real one? How are they going to check that? Are they asking the scanned copy of users passports? Are they asking to introduce your credit card number? Or, maybe, they will send someone to your home to confirm… your identity? Come on, please let’s be serious. If Google really wants to enforce and assure that users use their real names, so go ahead and implement real security measures to be 100% sure that the user is not using a fake identity. (Of course they will loose almost all their users if they do that, though) But if Google is not going to really check G+ profile identities, please stop wasting your time closing accounts and focus on many of the issues that people, for free, is asking you to improve.
Then look at this, in their privacy terms:
Google Profile.
In order to use Google+, you need to have a public Google Profile visible to the world, which at a minimum includes the name you chose for the profile. That name will be used across Google services and in some cases it may replace another name you’ve used when sharing content under your Google Account. We may display your Google Profile identity to people who have your email address or other identifying information.
Posts and other content shared by or with you – such as photos of you – may be visible on your profile to those with whom that content has been shared. You can use the profile editor to see how your profile appears to particular individuals.
“…which at a minimum includes the name you chose for the profile…”
Did you read that? The name you chose for the profile. I don’t see any indication to use my real name or “…by using a nick name your account will be suspended…”
This policy does not affect me personally, I used to write my real name everywhere, but I understand that many people have good reasons not to do so.
I just would like to see a little bit of common sense. For web illiterate people, this policy, shared among other social media platforms like Facebook, has a direct impact creating a wrong vision of how “identity” works on the web. People may do the wrong assumption like: people with nicknames = bad, people with “real” names = good. This policy is sending a wrong message, making people believe that by writing a “real name” you can trust that profile.
If somebody want to abuse the system, I can assure you, he/she doesn’t need a nick name to do so.
It’s quite usual in Tokyo to see a building in some place, and after one week or less it just disappeared and after some months, you come back to the same place and you see a new building. Tokyo’s shape changes really quickly, but what I saw today was beyond what I’m used to see. At least in my 5 years living here.
As you can see in the map, the blue area has been completely demolished. Hundred of apartments and tens of buildings just removed. I don’t know what they are building there, but just imagine the process to move all those people and companies away from there.
Look at that! The blue zone has been completely demolished…
Some pictures of the current construction work. Any ideas of what are they building there?
For the first 2 pictures I used a Nikon D700, lens 200mm.
I think it’s a sunspot, of course the big one is dust on the lens :)


These ones with a Nikon D200 with a 300mm lens.


For both pictures I used a polarized filter and an ND filter. Maximum speed, smallest aperture and minimum ISO.
Just look at this screenshot from Apple and let me know what you think:
I’m not criticizing Apple. In fact it’s one of the few companies that is really trying to combine design, technology, usability and performance in their products.
Even if storage improved during the last years, it’s still in the Neolithic Era compared with other technologies. Just look at that huge box. It’s bigger than the laptop next to it. For example, in the same place we can put an entire computer. Storage is only capable to put a hard mechanical drive, with a metallic disk, an engine and a head reading its surface… It’s just an evolution of the phonograph concept, using magnetic fields. On the right we have an early 1930s portable wind-up phonograph :)
I wonder when we will have a real improvement in storage. I mean having the same 4T of the picture, right in the same space of a 2.5inch disk for example.
A couple of days ago I was thinking about why people hide their EXIF data on the pictures they upload into Flickr. If it’s about privacy, I don’t see any data that could be a threat to your privacy.
For example, look at this picture EXIF data
The only personal information is my name and website. Well, that data is in there because I just decided to put it in there. I could choose a fake name and all the EXIF data won’t be even related to me. The rest of the data is just technical and it can be a great source of information for other photographers.
I don’t criticize people for hiding EXIF data, it’s your choice but I suggest you to think about it and the meaning of that tech data. For example, in this post by Scott Bourne he explains why he hides EXIF data. In his post you can get a different approach about why to hide EXIF data.
Personally I think that if you share pictures just to promote yourself, like a portfolio and your digital photographer life just exists for the purpose to spread the voice about your work as a marketing tool. Well, I understand that you don’t care about EXIF data and it’s easier to hide it and even forget that it exists.
But, if one part of your digital photographer life is about to share knowledge, exchange ideas and get in contact with other photographers, hiding such information is in direct contraction with the idea of sharing knowledge. I like to see which camera was used to take a picture, which lenses were used, at what time it was taken, an so forth. Not because I’m curious but because I want to see details, like focusing, sharpening, colors, dynamic range and many other things a photo geek cares about. That’s the reason I don’t hide my EXIF data, because I think that there is people out there interested to check those details. I’m sharing my knowledge and experience here, so why not share also tech stuff?
Based on the “Corriere della Sera” (one of the most important newspapers in Italy) and Yahoo news, for a mysterious reason not yet understood, all digital clocks in Catania (The second most important city in Sicily) are running 20 minutes faster. Also some cities nearby Catania seems to be affected in the same way. There are many theories at the moment, but none are able to give an explanation yet. Some people say it’s the Etna (the largest volcano in Italy) recent activity might have produced some sort of radiation. Others claim it’s due to the construction of a Submarine communications cable that is generating huge magnetic waves around the city… Maybe soon some people will talk about UFO’s and any other sort of ideas…
The fact, anyway, is that time is running faster in Sicily, maybe it could be the name for a movie :)
Sources (Italian)
Corriere della Sera
Yahoo News
Ilsussidiario