Tag Archives: design + tech

Telcel’s Mexican Monopoly

Allan Leinwand from GigaOM talking about competition-based market corrections:

We’ve all been there before — with cell phones, about a decade ago. Usage-based pricing tiers started out with very limited minutes and lots of overage charges. Competition in the market by innovative operators drove plans fairly quickly to a point where only exorbitant usage resulted in overage charges (and now there are flat-rate plans for those consumers, too).

With regards to Mexico, Telcel has such an unfair advantage its competitors can’t pressure the telcom behemoth to lower its rates. There is no innovation in the Mexican cellular market directly because of Telcel’s dynastic monopoly leaving Mexico stuck in a quagmire where even light usage of cell phones leads to overage charges in voice, sms and data.

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iPhone in Mexico: Dead-On-Arrival

Update: Gente, vayanse a firmar la petición que demanda precios justos para el iPhone en Mexico: NelTelcel.com, go now!

The moment all us peoples south of the er, um, the southern United States border have been waiting for: Apple’s iPhone is finally coming to Mexico. Telcel is the carrier. A quick click over to Telcel’s official iPhone rate plan page and the unbearable truth starts to sink in: we may have the iPhone but Telcel’s plans totally suck. Here’s what they look like, prices are in US dollars:

iPhone rates for Mexico1
entry plan middle plan high plan
$41 $62 $83
200 minutes 300 minutes 400 minutes
100 mbs data 150 mbs data 200 mbs data
100 sms 150 sms 200 sms
$4/extra mb of data $4/extra mb of data $4/extra mb of data
8gb iphone $310 8gb iphone $196 8gb iphone $80
16gb iphone $426 16gb iphone $310 16gb iphone $196

Most people outside of Mexico will be shocked by the paltry amount of minutes mexicans get for their money. Despite being a developing nation, mexicans pay more than three times what people in the states and Europe do (if you adjust for average income, it’s more like 20x). Unfortunately, Telcel enjoys a monopoly that’s well documented. High prices for talk minutes is a way of life here, most people shrug and bear it. The real kick in the pants isn’t the minutes, it’s the data.

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  1. Monthly plan price and subsidized iPhone price both include IVA (tax)
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Save The Waves

A friend of mine has started a local civil association, here in Nayarit, called “Caminos Al Mar”. Literally translated it means “Roads to the Sea” and he took this name for the group, as all of the access roads and paths to the places we surf are all being closed off, one by one. The groups stated goals are to work directly with governments, municipalities, developers and other civil associations to maintain and ensure proper access to beaches for everyone; beach and surf break protection; clean water initiatives and education on conservation/environmental issues.

To make a long story short Nayarit and Jalisco are both going through massive development. All development is supposed to be under the control and direction of the urban planning wings of local municipalities. Unlike places like the United States, Mexico’s constitution explicitly states that beaches are the property of the people and that access to beaches can not be denied. This is exactly what’s happening to large stretches of coast that up until now, have been largely undeveloped.

Save The Waves
front

This friend asked me to create a tshirt design promoting the group and this is the result. I had to distill the groups message into something as (relatively) simple as possible. The “Save The Waves” / “Salvar Las Olas” message seemed to work and he gave me the tagline “Seamos realistas, lo pidamos lo imposible” (We are realists, we ask the impossible).

Caminos Al Mar
back

The association’s logomark is respectfully borrowed from the Huichol symbol for the Ojo de Dios (God’s eye), Birri came up with that inspired thought. and the tagline means “supporting the rights of surfers in México”.

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Alexander Girard + Flor = Giveaway!

The giveaway is now over as of Sat. June 21st. Heather was the winner, chosen completely at random. Thank you to all who participated.


Flor makes really gorgeous modular carpet tiles, if you read Dwell, you’ve seen their products for sure. Flor is introducing a collection of designs based on Alexander Girard’s La Fonda del Sol series. The collection comes in 4 flavors and they are carpet tiles elevated to an art form.

A little bit on Alexander Girard:

Working smack in the middle of the hey-day of mid-20th century American design was Alexander Girard. Many consider Girard the most influential textile designer of the modern era. But to many more, he remains relatively unknown. To FLOR, Girard is everything we could ever hope to aspire to: functionality made better by a blended balance of vibrant color, whimsical design and pure sophistication.

Girard’s La Fonda del Sol restaurant project put the emphasis on sol with bold, color-saturated graphics of the sun revving up the walls, the furniture, the floors, the tableware, the menus, even the matchbooks. Though the restaurant closed in 1971, Girard’s work there maintained an iconic status – each piece thoroughly beautiful, all supremely functional. And it’s that work that has inspired the FLOR Girard line of modular carpet tiles.

In conjunction with the launch of the Girard collection, Flor has been gracious enough to bless readers of this blog with some free product. How cool is that?!

We’re giving away one 3×5 area rug (6 tiles) in the Verde colorway (pictured right), with a street value of approx. $160. And it couldn’t be more simple, just drop a comment on this post, waxing poetic, on why you think Girard’s designs should be gracing your floors (truth-be-told, I’d put it on the wall). After a few days or so, I’ll pick a winner and Flor will mail the piece directly to you in about 2 weeks. Unfortunately, the giveaway is only open to people within the United States (for shipping cost reasons). Don’t forget to leave your name and email and when I pick a winner I’ll notify all commenters by bcc email that a winner was chosen and I’ll update this post with the winner’s name (to make it all official-like). good luck!

More on Alexander Girard | La Fonda del Sol Restaurant

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It’s Her Turn Now.

The US Campaign for Burma is still kicking with daily videos showcasing Burma’s fight against its military junta.

The above video is a collaborative effort. Isaiah Seret wrote and directed the video. Our nomadic homie Alexander Kori Girard created the drawings and hand-drawn type. I put all the pieces together, added the type cards and laced it all with a bright shiny ribbon. Jesse Klein edited it. and that’s Beirut on the track with “The Penalty”.

Again, do yourself a favor and watch it in high quality, under the lower right hand side of the video.

More on Aung San Suu Kyi (pronounced kinda like “on son sue chee”).

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Twitter / edfladung

Using Twitter? Friend me up!

Apparently, Twitter is really starting to take off. I’ve been on it for about 6 months now, yapping away in to the twitter void. It’s got a tech heavy following, but over the past month or so, Twitter has really started to take off with the non-tech folks. Twitter can be many different things to many different people, which is why it’s so cool. I use Twitter in a few different ways:

  1. Throw-away blogging, it’s for the kind of things you don’t want laying around on your blog, archived for posterity sake, and picking up negative comments years later (example)
  2. It’s the best way to have any question imaginable answered promptly
  3. Kinda like a passive IM chat room or IRC channel, where you get to pick who’s messages you get to listen in on

Twitter is pretty bad ass and I just thought I’d put a post out there (mostly for the benefit of you rss headz). Friend me up, if you’re a twitterer.

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Aperture Faux Xprocess Primer

faux process image test 1 - full imagefaux process Image 2 - full image
Left: Original | Center: Photoshop | Right: Aperture

Yesterday, I came across a great tutorial called Curvy Cross Processing by Mark Fleming, on using Photoshop’s s-curve to approximate a cross-process look for digital images. Reading my way through Mark’s curves-only tutorial, it became clear that I could probably replicate his approach using Aperture’s levels tool. Since Aperture’s initial release people have been clamoring for a xprocess adjustment block or plugin and I wanted to see if I could get a pretty good xprocess look using levels combined with a little contrast and A2′s new Vignette tool (which rocks!).

Above are two example images. On the left is the original image, in the center the Photoshop image and on the right the Aperture image. The altered images are pretty similar. The photoshop image is slightly punchier. Further along in the primer I’ll get in to the differences.

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iPhone in Mexico: A Follow Up

iphone in mexico: A Follow Up

I wrote this post last year about the iPhone coming to Mexico (if/when). The post still gets comments daily, most of which point out that indeed the iPhone is available in Mexico, albeit not officially supported by any of the major carriers.

I thought I’d follow up with some up-to-date facts:

  • Yes, if you’re coming from the US and want to use your iPhone in Mexico, it’ll work on the Telcel network (edge). You’ll get voice and data.
  • If you’re in Mexico, you can buy an iPhone, have it unlocked/chipped and use it on Telcel’s network and Movistar’s (assumably Movistar’s network is edge, also).

These are what 90% of the commenters seem to be saying. But no one is commenting on how the iPhone works once you actually get it up and on to the network. And more importantly, how much it costs to use the iPhone.

What I’m interested in are the following:
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Noguchi Lamp Experiment …

…or otherwise known as “The Current State of Online Shopping”

akari / noguchi 1N (beehive)akari / noguchi 2P

I really dig the work of Isamu Noguchi. His lamps are particularly beautiful and have ungodly light qualities. The small table lamps are under a hundred bucks and make the perfect gift for those of your friends and loved ones with modernist inclinations, balanced with a good dose of wabi-sabi.

Recently I tried to gift one of the table lamps to a friend, making the purchase online. I was unpleasantly surprised at how discombobulated most online check out systems still are. Admittedly, I only use a small selection of online retailers regularly, so I guess it’s my own fault that my expectation baseline is calibrated by sites like amazon and apple. To be honest, Noguchi lamps are a specialty item and often have a two to four week lead time, since they’re made in batches, by hand. So I had two criteria for the purchase: 1. to have the order ship in 2-3 days 2. to be able to include a gift message. So without further ado, here are the results of the four places I found that sell Noguchi lamps online, I’ve left the guilty nameless:

  • Site 1: Ships immediately but no gift message option.
  • Site 2: Ships in 2-4 weeks, has a gift message option, but if the message is longer then 100 characters the final submit screen gets a Microsoft Database error message, you can resubmit the order 100 times and it won’t go through, you won’t know what went wrong til you call customer service.
  • Site 3: Akari (the manufacturer of the lamps) uses a Yahoo store that ships in 2-4 weeks and no gift message option (yahoo?! come on, how 2002 is that?!).
  • Site 4: Ships in 2-3 days and allows you to add a gift message and the check out is relatively pain-free.

So to wrap up a long, tortured, wandering diatribe, if you’re looking to order a Noguchi lamp online, as a present for a friend, look no further then Design Warehouse. These guys rock. Their check out process is great, if you you have a question, their live customer support is friendly, quirky and ultra-helpful. They’ve go stuff stocked and they get the details. and it’s always about the details. They only have a few lamps in stock, but beggars can’t be choosers, right? At least they get the whole online customer experience thing.

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redesign?

if i wasn’t neck deep in about a thousand other things, right about now, I’d do a up a new redesign for this here site. I’ve already got it all planned out in me little noggin. oh where shall i find the time? and is 1100px width (non-collapsing) too wide? Doesn’t everyone have apple cinema displays by now?

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Isaiah Seret dot com

is.com

My soul brother Isaiah needed a slick little website that gets his beautiful handmade music videos across to potential clients in a lightning fast manner. I hooked him up. We decided on a one-pager that uses Lightwindow, so viewers don’t have to leave the page to view the videos. The result is sofreshnsoclean and easy to use. Past the website design, Isaiah’s videos are labors of love, all handmade and with feeling. Each is gorgeous in its own right. Isaiah is on a different level than most video directors I see. Take a peek, you won’t regret it.

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Urban

usc4.gifusc3.gif
usc2.gifusc1.gif

My old Camp Sloane buddy, Darius, runs a non-profit soccer initiative for kids. He’s starting a new collaborative network for organizations similar to his and he needed a new logo, I gave him four options. Let’s see whish one he digs.

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Aperture 2.0: what’s next?

aperture screenshot

The Apple Aperture community is abuzz. After watching Leopard hit the street, we’re all biting our fingers hoping Apple is not too far off from releasing Aperture 2.0. It’s been over two years since the initial release of the product and to say that we could use an update, well, I’d drag out the desert/water metaphor but I’m so tired of waiting I’m just too lazy to put the whole sentence together.

O’Reilly’s Inside Aperture blog chimes in with two musings on post-Leopard Aperture goings-ons. The first, gave rowdy Aperture users a chance to sound-off on the features they’re looking forward to and the features they want (or else). The second, a roundup of useful Aperture community resource links that includes several ways to give your feedback directly to Apple (Tim O’Reilly is appreciative, but even he doesn’t have a direct line to His Steveness). There have been no concrete answers on when Aperture 2.0 will hit the streets with nary a peep from Apple (as usual). I have a laundry list a mile long of features I’d like to see in the new version, I gave my 2 cents in the first article above, you can click on over to read my abbreviated list.

In the second article, a commenter suggests that we, Aperture faithfuls, huff it on over to Apple’s Final Cut Studio site to see what the new version (6.0) has to offer, the reasoning is that some of the technologies found in FCS could possibly make it into Aperture 2.0. I took the advice and checked out a bunch of the ‘new feature’ videos. I was absolutely amazed by what I saw. My biggest curiosity was with FCS’s new bundled color adjustment application, quaintly called Color. If only half of the underlying technology and features of Color made it into Aperture 2.0, I’d be a happy camper. It’s gorgeous, innovative and intuitive. Here are just a few of the features* of Color that I’m hoping will have some shared DNA with those of Aperture 2.0:

  • GPU accelerated action all over the place
  • Next Generation FxPlug Filter architecture – for internal and 3rd party filters
  • Filter presets and grouping of filters into one preset
  • Pre-built color effects and ability to create your own (think Xprocess, film stock simulation, etc…)
  • Drag and Drop filter application
  • Grab and lift on-photo filter manipulation
  • Signature looks that can by applied over an entire project (and controlled/adjusted from one place)
  • 3D color scope
  • Gorgeous curves implementation for Hue, Saturation and Luminosity
  • Selective filter application based on targeted Hue, Saturation and Luminosity
  • Vignetting – circle, square or custom shape (using b-splines)

I’m sure there are a million others, but this list is pretty impressive. The more I look at Color, the more I think that Apple should just do away with the Adjustments HUD concept all together. It works for a handful of limited-functionality filters, but what I’m seeing in Color is on a whole other level of image manipulation. I can’t see how the Adjustments HUD in its current configuration can possibly contain as much functionality as Color provides. I could be wrong.

One thing I gotta say though, is that even after two years of heavy usage, I still love the Aperture user interface. Looking at Final Cut Studio’s and even Color’s, they don’t quite match the polish and shine of Aperture. I’m assuming at some point FCS will inherit that particular part of Aperture’s DNA, as Logic Studio just has.

After seeing Color at work, two things strike me the heaviest: A. Color is so advanced it makes Aperture 1.0′s image adjustment capabilities look almost archaic. B. I have never been this excited and enthusiastic to see what the Aperture team brings to the table and I can only hope that they are sharing technologies with the team that worked on Color.

* I’ve changed the features slightly to make more sense with regards to how they may be applied to Aperture 2.0

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Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard

mac

Unless you’ve actually got a life or have been living under a rock, you know that the webosphere is abuzz with news of Apple’s impending delivery of their next operating system Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. Everyone’s giving their 5 cents on the best and worst features of the new system. All in agreement that Leopard is packed with great new features and Apple once again has raised the bar on powerful, useful features packed into deceptively easy-to-use interfaces.

Personally, I’m really looking forward to Leopard. Time Machine alone is worth the upgrade price. Quick look and Stacks are gonna be super cool and Spaces will pretty much do away with the need for a second monitor (I think this will most likely be a consumer favorite). But for me, personally, my money is on iChat and screen sharing. Let me explain.

I go for Steve Jobs’ reality distortion field marketing gimmicks just like everyone else. The mac is easier to use, your IT department will need to look for new jobs, things just work, etc… etc…

This just isn’t reality. Sure Macs need 10x less tech support then PCs running Windows/Vista and when something software-related goes fubar on the latter, you don’t need tech support, you need a new computer. Apple has made the OS so simple that someone with a pretty good knowledge of the OS can solve 99% of the trouble-shooting questions your average user has*. This means that if you’re a recent switcher, a mac novice or a technophobe and your friend is a savvy mac user, chances are s/he can fix any little problems you have. For most of the mac-centric people in my little corner of Mexico, I’m that person (the nearest Mac Genius is 3000 miles away). In addition to the people close to me, I have several friends in far away places that hit me up on a near daily basis over iChat/email to get quick help with some of Mac OS X’s “undocumented features” (read: idiosyncrasies). And in turn, I have a friend or two who I rely on when I get stumped.

At home I use Apple Remote Desktop, which is a heavy-duty version of the screen sharing capabilities that are built into iChat and the Finder in Leopard. I troubleshoot my wife’s computer almost daily, usually having something to do with MS Word/Excel. We have a mac mini that acts as our “entertainment hub”. I administrate both using Remote Desktop, over our home network, the screen controlling features are insanely useful and once you try it, you’ll never understand how you did without it.

Years ago, my good friend Steve showed me a new feature of Windows (back when he was confused and walking the desert alone), where you could share and control the screens of your friends’ computers, over the internet. I nearly shat my pants. If I’m not mistaken, this feature has since been removed from Windows because it was a security nightmare. Well, this feature has finally come to the Mac (albeit with a better security implementation). iChat and the new Finder now have built-in screen sharing capabilities and I think this is one of the “creeper” features of Leopard. Once I’ve had my fill of the glossy, marquee features, this is the one that’s gonna be the most life-changing.

The screen sharing capabilities of iChat will allow me to dip into a friend’s computer 2 blocks away or 5000 miles away to fix problems, show someone how to properly use and dispose of dmg installers or just to set my grand dad’s desktop to change images randomly every once in a while. I’ll have the ability to help a friend in San Francisco with a kerning problem in Adobe InDesign or a friend in New York City with organizational problems in Apple Aperture. This kind of screen sharing will be commonplace inside of 6 months. Your computer will no longer be an isolated piece of machinery, connected by text/audio/video chat and email. You can now share your computer with friends. Troubleshooting and asking for advice/help will no longer happen over a text chat or lugging your iMac to a friend’s house or the nearest Apple store. I’m really super excited about this feature. Let’s just hope it doesn’t take a fiber connection to work properly.

For an example of iChat screen sharing, check out Apple’s Leopard guided tour video. What I’m referring to starts at the 24 minute mark. This video is like crack for mac nerds. As I watched it, I was hooting, hollering at the screen in giddy anticipation. Reality distortion field, you are my friend.

For an added bonus, totally awol from the 300+ features page is the .Mac feature called “Back To My Mac”. This feature is gonna be killer. It allows you access and control your home computer (or other computers), over the internet, through .Mac. For instance, if you’re traveling and a client needs a tweak to a certain file. Instead of having to jibe a workmate into doing the change, you can access and control your work computer, make the change and send it off, viola. This feature gets super interesting when you think about how it could be integrated with iPhone or what happens when someone stupidly steals your macbook and tries to use it. Again, not even on the 300+ features list. but why? Right about now, I’m glad I renewed my .Mac membership.

So, what’s your favorite feature?

* hardware is another thing. Apple’s hardware quality control system is in the crapper and most tech savvy mac heads know it. As a tech support for friends, in the past year I’ve helped people deal with faulty screens, fried power bricks and internal hard drives, multiple cases of dead fans and one case of I don’t even tell what was wrong with the thing. Almost everyone of my friends has had a hardware based problem with their mac, that’s not a good percentage. Do you know what it’s like dealing with hardware issues in Mexico? holy crapola.

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Testing NetNewsWire

nnwAfter 3+ years of Bloglines, I’m finally getting fed up with its web based approach (images failing to load, repeated posts, no dedicated ‘clippings’ feature etc…). I’ve resisted NetNewsWire in the past, because of its inability to display several feeds at once, I think NNW refers to it as the ‘combined’ view (this is also why I don’t use NewsFire). Well, now that combined view is working, I’m testing NNW out to make the jump. There are a few nit picky things I can’t get past:

  • While in combined view, the name of the blog is smaller then the titles of the post. This seams trivial but I’m stuck on it.
  • It seems that the style sheet switching feature has no effect on combined view. but why?
  • Do I really have to press command-k (mark all as read) after reading a folder of feeds? NNW doesn’t just mark them as ‘read’ after I’ve hit the bottom of the feed scroll pane?
  • It seems the only way to delete a ‘clipping’ is by having to go to “News > Delete Clipping…” am I correct? and what’s up with the unnecessary “…”

Have any other tips for using NNW and integrating MarsEdit as well? drop it on me.

ps. For those of you using NNW in conjunction with MarsEdit (with WordPress), what do you do about wp tags, technorati tags and other custom fields?

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