Category: Personal
Will I be more content without content?
So a big part of my day is going through my Google Reader news feed and I have a handful of shows that I subscribe to on Hulu, plus movies that I watch on Netflix, feeds I read on facebook and twitter, the occasional bored streak Stumbling around the internet, subscriptions on youtube to check, and a host of other things I’m sure I’m not thinking of right now. So I’ve decided, that starting Thursday morning and going for a week (through April 1st), I’m cutting myself off. The Netflix will sit unopened, the Hulu and RSS feeds will just have to pile up. Until the end of this month, I will cease to be a consumer of content, and will dedicate the extra time to producing and enjoying.
Retweet this if you’d like to join my fast. But don’t expect me to read your tweet and respond
Kevin OUT!
And… We’re Back.
Logic High Blog has been having some trouble recently, but now that I’ve got everything strapped down, and re-situated at a rocking new host all the old links have been restored and you can expect new posts and information here, for everything that has to do with Kevin Lohman, BadPirate, or Logic High Software.
AT&T, I'd rather be tied with a tether than a leash!
Sign the petition – Slashdot it
The new iPhone 3GS was announced today, and many of it’s new features were confirmed by Apple. And AT&T won’t be supporting some of these new features, I’d like to explain what, why, and what we as consumers can do to prevent it. One of these great new features is tethering, and will be offered in many countries by a variety of carriers, but… AT&T wasn’t even stated as being one of the companies PLANNING a launch. WHY? Your network supports it, the phone now supports it… Another one of these great new features was MMS, and while it is being offered on “Twenty-nine carriers in 76 countries” guess which country isn’t going to be one of them? AT&T is the only carrier of the iPhone in the US, and despite offering it for many of their other video/photo capable phones, iPhones have been left out and forced to use a very awkward and painful system to view their MMS’s (Open SMS, copy down long random user name and long random password, and then, because the link isn’t even often properly clickable, copy down the link, manually enter link into iPhone or computer browser, and at the corresponding web page manually enter both the long user name and the long password. If there were no typo’s in this process you’ll get a crappy miniturized version of the original content sent to you). Can’t blame Apple, the phone demonstrated it was quite capable of displaying photos and videos, even with the old model. And now that sending MMS is integrated into the new operating system, there remains no excuse whatsoever. But AT&T is in no hurry, stating no support until late summer because… drumroll: They have to remove the Opt-Out codes for all the iPhones in the system. So they have a little toggling to do in their database. Should this process take 2-4 months? No. But it will. Because there is no market pressure for them to do so. AT&T set it up that way.
Contracts
What about all the screaming customers? Don’t they represent market pressure? Not really. First lets look at the group, currently the only AT&T customers who are holding phones that can support MMS, and will support tethering who won’t be able to use these features are iPhone users. Blackberry users on AT&T are currently enjoying BOTH of these features. So the only customers screaming are iPhone users. And AT&T has us 2 ways:
- Contract – Most iPhone users are in a 2 year contract, that isn’t up and won’t be up for a while, additionally new hardware purchases, lost broken phones (no insurance offered), price plan changes, etc. all extend your contract. It’s a zero sum game.
- Hardware – for those of us who dutifully make sure not to change our price plan, own the oldest iPhone hardware, and refuse cheaper upgrade plans, the contract can’t hold us. But AT&T’s current exclusivity agreement for the iPhone can. Sure you can hack your phone, and put it on T-mobile, but you won’t find MMS or tethering there because they can’t officially support it until the agreement runs out. You’ve made a large investment in the cost of your phone, in money, applications, learning curve, etc, and this inertia is enough to keep most customers with AT&T. Until the features and screaming make it so we’re better off going through the hastle of switching carriers, buying another phone and learning it. They’ve got us.
Monopoly Power
A quick economics lesson: So, AT&T has a large group of customers (iPhone users) who have a large barrier to exit (the requirements for excercising monopoly power) as well as lack of available substitutes (for many of us iPhone users, there is no substitute). These ingredients allow for the excersing of monopoly power. What does this mean exactly? In a perfectly competitive economy every business is forced to take the price of the market and keep their features comparible in order to be competitive. This price is where the marginal cost (the cost of producing one more unit of product) is equivalent to the marginal profit for selling that unit (What the consumers are willing to pay), this ratio provides no excess profit to the corporation, and leaves all that extra value with the consumer. Maybe you were willing to pay more, but because of competition you didn’t have to. Monopoly power (whether a true monopoly or a partial monopoly) allows companies to move closer to their ideal selling location, the point at which marginal profit (The profit made for selling an additional unit) is greatest. They may sell less units, but at a higher price and a more economic cost / revenue ratio. The consumers end up paying much more, and they lose the advantage they have in a competitive environment. At the moment, while AT&T would gain customers and remain profitable if they had more reasonable price plans (like not charging extra for SMS, or better data prices) they have no incentive to (from a purely profit standpoint) as they can make MORE money by charging their existing customers more. The same holds true for features. New features, like MMS / Tethering cost money to implement, and while doing so might bring them more customers (and likely they would still remain profitable), their number crunchers have clearly decided that the costs won’t outweight the profits. Basically, there is a slider, you can choose straight profit $$$ or you can give some of your profit back to the customer in exchange for loyalty and market share.

Comparative Profit Margins
Here is a list of the major wireless companies and their operating margins. In a particular market the players with a higher percentage here are either operating much more efficiently then their competitors, or are taking more customer surplus (good will). Looking at these figures you might guess that AT&T has the largest subscriber base, when actually Verizon does. Verizon also happens to rank up near the top in customer satisfaction among us carriers. T-Mobile, which also has a really high profit margin is the other company that ranks up with Verizon on customer satisfaction, but their relative user base is also much smaller then AT&T. So AT&T charges more money, serves less customers, or has a lower customer satisfaction rating then it’s competitors. It’s their business model. And it’s raking in some great profits. But it doesn’t have to be that way.
Alternative
It’s probably too late to save the iPhone exclusivity, Apple does not have a history of tolerating poor service from it’s partners, and based on the zingers during todays Keynote, they won’t be likely to re-up the exclusive contract. But AT&T can still bring it back. By providing a more customer friendly model, the services that the customers (and partners) are demanding, and they’ll keep most of us, but commitment needs to be shown. Not just a rollout at the expected late date, but an immediate, public and effective effort (even if costly) to surprise us all with a simultaneous feature release date. The positive press, customer loyalty returned, and in the long term, profits will outweigh any other business plan.
Action
Please tell AT&T that when the option comes to leave, you’ll be walking. But also, let them know that if they commit themselves to improving the customer experience that you will stay. By doing so we may affect change.
You call that art?
He sat in a poorly lit corner of the furniture crowded coffee house. His apparel would become outdated if you described it. Pen in one hand, and a black notebook in the other he bent over his work.
She was at the counter, chatting with the barista, biding her time until she noticed him. The attraction instant and subconscious. A primal understanding, here was a mate with talent. The way young girls swoon over pop stars, or the girl at the bar goes home with the guy that clears the pool table. She approached the table and sat.
He glanced up from his work, immediately taken in his own way, physically reacting to his own unconscious understanding of her quality. He felt fueled and inspired by it. Whether or not he realized it, sitting across from him was the only reason he practiced his art. His designs the human equivalent of carefully pruned plumage. He smiled at her, and went back to work, with passion and drive. He could work the rest of his life sitting across from her, the power of woman so subtle and strong.
She sat and watched him work for a while, without saying a word. Enraptured in the way he would look up every now and again, making her wonder, is it a portrait? Or maybe a poem. Perhaps he’s writing a screenplay.
Is it about me?
“Can I see?”
He clutched the notebook close to his now palipitating chest. This was his work, what would she think? It is a big moment, but he has courage and confidence. He smiles, and pushes the notebook across the table.
She looks at it slowly moving it from side to side.
“What is it?”
Perplexed with a sprig of disappointment she looks to him.
“Code.”
Gamers Assistant 1.1 awaiting review
Version 1.0 application blues got you down? Well cry no more, because here comes Gamers Assistant v1.1!
Changes!
* You can now change the label of the modules in the main menu
* Set counter to number function added so that you can instantly and variably change the count on any counter to any keyboard entered number
* You can now change the label of the modules in the main menu
* Change display name to GA (Gamers Assistant)
* Dice roll now icon prettified with top glare
* More responsive
* If you use the wand to place the roll dice function onto the main menu that button will now roll all dice instead of just the module you took it from.
* BUG SQUASHED: Should not be able to delete the settings module
* BUG SQUASHED: Add module should not be a placable function using the wand tool
* BUG SQUASHED: Add Counter function – no icon
And now with new shiny icon!
Coming soon to an App Store near you!
Which Logo is best?
I’m forming a Corporation with a few partners in Hawaii, and kind of torn on logo design. What do you think?
[polldaddy poll="912174"]
Work Break
Stopped coding to take a moment and see how other people spend their time…
Fast Tube by Casper
Oh, but it gets better…
Fast Tube by Casper
And not just that song either…
Fast Tube by Casper
And just in case that wasn’t challenging enough…
Fast Tube by Casper
Now I just feel like I’m slacking off. Better get back to working harder.
Golden Ticket
I met a girl in Prague the other day, and we had dinner, a bottle of wine and really interesting conversation. The chemistry was good too, but it was just a night as I had to leave the next day. It’s been my experience that the chemistry analogy is quite effective (as analogies go) in representing the compatibility of two people. We all have our own unique properties, and can make a guess as to what they are, but since there is no real way to fully analyze our emotional makeup, there will always be a big unknown X factor.
We watch others around us mix, some mixing well, others separating after time, and still others exploding and burning violently. We can take the knowledge gained from witnessed experiments and our own experiments in life and hopefully avoid getting burned too bad, but we’ve got no clue, even if the math doesn’t seem right sometimes the result is quite surprising. With 6 billion+ (are we at 7 billion yet?) people out there (and thereby more then 3 billion possible chemical combinations depending on how you swing) there has to be hundreds of mixes that will lead to a positive result.
So I felt bittersweet saying goodbye to the girl in Prague, wondering if I was blindly walking past another match. But what about the girl who winked at me in the restaurant, or the one I bumped into on the metro? It certainly would be a lot easier if people just wore name tags identifying them as your soulmate. Thinking about this I made myself chuckle in the Prague National museum, walking around with a little hand held tour guide. Punch in a number and it will tell you about the exhibit you are looking at. Found myself thinking how much easier if the cute girls at the museum had numbers. “22: She’s currently available, but has bipolar mood swings that start to show up at 2 weeks, and kicks like a mule when she sleeps, move on to next exhibit.”
I’ve decided that as long as I enjoy every person I meet, regardless of whether or not the chemicals match, it’ll be just fine. It will be like looking for Willy Wonka’s Golden Ticket; even if I don’t find the ticket at least there was a bar of chocolate inside