Fail Whale Loses Election 2012

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Bianca Bosker, The Huffington Post:

On Nov. 4, 2008, the day Barack Obama was elected, users posted a total of 1.8 million tweets – not all concerning politics. This time, Twitter hummed with more than 31 million election-related tweets and saw a one-minute peak during Obama’s acceptance speech, when 874,560 tweets were sent in the span of 60 seconds.

Twitter users sent half as many tweets as they did during Election Day 2008 - in one minute.

Twitter is simply the best for live events. Last night was no exception.


Robert Frost On Voting.

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Robert Frost:

Thinking isn’t agreeing or disagreeing. That’s voting.

When someone forgoes their right to vote, they retain their right to complain - contrary to common belief. They instead forfeit their right to be heard.

Be heard.

The length, inconvenience, and cost associated with voting lines are minimal when compared with the length, inconvenience, and cost associated with the struggle to ensure voting rights for all.

Vote.


Scrolling Or Paging

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Dr. Drang:

The new version of iBooks allows you to read books in a continuous scroll instead of page by page. This has, surprisingly, set off an argument on which is the better way to read an ebook.

[…]

I don’t get it. Paging is clearly an artifact of the technology of paper books, a technology I love deeply, but one that doesn’t make a lot of sense in an ebook reader.

I agree with Dr. Drang here. I was originally dubious to the idea of scrolling, having long used paging on the Kindle and in iBooks. After using iBooks for awhile on iPhone, I love the scrolling option - an outcome that shouldn’t have been surprising given that I use it in Instapaper.


Twittergram

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Nick Bilton, reporting for The New York Times:

In the coming months, Twitter plans to update its mobile applications to introduce filters for photos that will allow people to share altered images on Twitter and bypass Instagram, the popular mobilecentric photo-sharing network, according to people who work at the company but asked not to be named as they are not allowed to discuss unannounced projects.

Sigh. I am sure such a feature would be popular. It is also continues the sad progression of the service. Those leading Twitter seemingly don’t appreciate what originally made Twitter so popular (or they simply don’t care). The company is quickly becoming another empty advertisement-driven venture, trying to do whatever it takes to add eyeballs to the service. I wished Twitter realized that we don’t need another Facebook or Instagram - simply being Twitter is good enough.


Sports And Punditry

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David Roher, writing for Deadspin:

The hardest thing Silver works at is eliminating bias, so when baseball fans accuse him of being biased against their team or political lackeys accuse him of being biased against their candidate, it’s the accusers themselves who are revealing their own insurmountable bias. In their attempt to put Silver on trial, they only convict themselves.


Mark Coddington gives a smart assessment of the recent media backlash against Nate Silver:

In actuality, of course, Silver’s specificity isn’t arrogance at all — it’s the natural product of a scientific, statistical way of producing knowledge. Statistical analyses produce specific numbers by their very nature. That doesn’t mean they’re certain: In fact, the epistemology has long been far more tentative in reaching conclusions than the epistemology of journalism. As many people have noted over the past few days, a probability is not a prediction. Silver himself has repeatedly called for less certainty in political analysis, not more. But that split between specificity and certainty is a foreign concept to the journalistic epistemology.

Perhaps Ezra Klein put it best:

Lots of pundits don’t like Nate Silver because he makes them feel innumerate. Then they criticize him and prove it.


Site Stats: October 2012.

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Below are this site’s statistics following the tenth month of regular publication. Past stats can be found for January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, and September.

Most Visited Posts

Most Visited Linked Posts

Visitors

  • 1,089 page views (22,676 for 2012)
  • 647 unique visitors (13,512 for 2012)
  • 71% visits were from U.S., including all 50 States + D.C.
  • Top international traffic included Germany (8%), United Kingdom (6%), and Canada (5%).

Platforms

  • Windows (46%, down from 47%)
  • Macintosh (46%, up from 45%)
  • Linux (8%, unchanged)

Browsers

  • Chrome (38%, down from 45%)
  • Safari and WebKit (26%, up from 24%)
  • Firefox (23%, up from 20%)
  • Internet Explorer (8%, unchanged)
  • Mobile Safari (3%, up from 2%)
  • Other (2%)

Once again, I appreciate everyone who visited the site and offered feedback via Facebook, Twitter, and email.

If you have any suggestions or comments, do get in touch or feel free to follow me.


Weather, Silver, And Innumeracy

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Simply Statistics discusses the recent attacks aimed at statisticians who are forecasting the 2012 election:

I don’t know much about Dylan Byers, but from reading this column and a quick scan of his twitter feed, it appears he doesn’t know much about statistics. Some people have gotten pretty upset at him on Twitter and elsewhere about this fact, but I’d like to take a different approach: education.

A good article. I’d recommend reading it.

(via: Patrick Marsh)


Disney Acquires Lucasfilm

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George Lucas:

For the past 35 years, one of my greatest pleasures has been to see Star Wars passed from one generation to the next. It’s now time for me to pass Star Wars on to a new generation of filmmakers. I’ve always believed that Star Wars could live beyond me, and I thought it was important to set up the transition during my lifetime.

Disney announced plans to release Star Wars Episode 7 in 2015. Well, I guess they can’t screw it up any worse than Lucas.

This brings everything full circle. Pixar started in 1979 as a part of Lucasfilm. Steve Jobs led a group that bought Pixar from Lucasfilm in 1986. In 2006, Disney acquired Pixar from Jobs. Today, Disney reunited Lucasfilm and Pixar.


Today, Apple announced changes in their corporate leadership.

Apple® today announced executive management changes that will encourage even more collaboration between the Company’s world-class hardware, software and services teams. As part of these changes, Jony Ive, Bob Mansfield, Eddy Cue and Craig Federighi will add more responsibilities to their roles. Apple also announced that Scott Forstall will be leaving Apple next year and will serve as an advisor to CEO Tim Cook in the interim.

[…]

Additionally, John Browett is leaving Apple ….

I have a few immediate takeaways from this announcement. First, the press release is heavy on corporate jargon, which I find annoying. Second, the executive leadership at Apple seems to be rather discordant in recent months. Finally, the changes seem to make sense.

In January, Apple replaced outgoing SVP of Retail, Ron Johnson, with Dixons CEO John Browett. In August, Browett began cutting back staff at Apple retail locations, leading to complaints of over-worked and under-staffed employees. Soon after, Apple apologized:

Making these changes was a mistake and the changes are being reversed. Our employees are our most important asset and the ones who provide the world-class service our customers deserve.

Today, Browett is out - almost announced in passing at the end of the press release.

In June, Apple announced SVP of Hardware Engineering, Bob Mansfield was retiring, to be replaced by Dan Riccio. In July, Apple pulled out of the Electronic Product Environmental Assessment Tool (EPEAT) program. Only a week later, Mansfield apologized for the mistake:

We’ve recently heard from many loyal Apple customers who were disappointed to learn that we had removed our products from the EPEAT rating system. I recognize that this was a mistake. Starting today, all eligible Apple products are back on EPEAT.

One month later, Apple reported that Mansfield wasn’t retiring.

In September, Apple released the iPhone 5 and iOS 6. Among the many new features was an in-house mapping solution. Immediately, Apple maps became the focus of customer dissatisfaction. The case could be made that the timing of the switch from Google to their own solution was inevitable for Apple. In any case, Apple CEO Tim Cook directly apologized for their maps application:

At Apple, we strive to make world-class products that deliver the best experience possible to our customers. With the launch of our new Maps last week, we fell short on this commitment. We are extremely sorry for the frustration this has caused our customers and we are doing everything we can to make Maps better.

Today, Apple announced the head of the iOS development team, Scott Forstall, is leaving next year (although no reasons are given).

Perhaps I am reading too much into these. But the fact is that there are now at least three missteps in the past few months for which Apple has publicly apologized and that apparently led to leadership changes. Whether these incidents were bumps in the road while settling into a post-Steve-Jobs Apple, their collective consequence is a slightly impugned reputation. The relative stability in leadership since Apple’s resurgence in 1997 is seemingly gone, at least temporarily. Perhaps Tim Cook is simply penciling in his starting lineup - a process that takes time.

Jony Ive will now be tasked with human interface across the entire line of Apple products. Perhaps this was to settle an internal debate between design philosophies. The team is then packed into three main areas: hardware technology and design, software, and online services. The moves seemingly make sense and are in line with Apple’s own ideologies: simple, concise, and focused. In the meantime, we’ll have to wait to see how these changes translate to Apple’s products.