Posts Tagged ‘david sable on amazon’

Monday, August 13th, 2012

Are You Into Retro?

Are you into retro?

Retro anything…

Fashion, food tastes, furnishings – you name it.

Retro seems always to be in style – in fact, it’s often haute couture – the highest.

Yet some retro is viewed as merely old, tired and worn out, and we slavishly pursue the new in denial of what was. In fact some retro isn’t even retro….

Technology has clearly gone that route as analysts pretend that Amazon isn’t a store and that Facebook has created a new human trait called “sharing.”

Point being, it’s not retro thinking to understand what is and what isn’t actually worn out and old – it’s just plain old smart.

Steve Jobs always understood that better than anyone – while others sold “High Tech” and its inherent complications, he launched the revolution by addressing the human consumer in all of us and then sold colors and design.  When others obsessed over the technical features of what would be called smartphones and made them complicated small clones of computers, he launched that revolution by simply saying Hello…and as others layered tools upon tools – stylus to pad for one – Jobs said, “So let’s not use a stylus. We’re going to use the best pointing device in the world. We’re going to use a pointing device that we’re all born with – born with ten of them. We’re going to use our fingers.”

I was reminded of this as I read about the resurgence of propeller planes in commercial travel. Turboprops to be exact.

More – orders for turboprop commercial planes are helping hurting manufacturers, creating jobs and otherwise helping the economy.

And even more – it will give new opportunity for local and regional travel – bringing with it all the added economic benefits that come along with travelers.

Read some of the analysis here:

TIME Magazine

Environmental Graffiti

The critical story, of course, is that jet travel proved to be untenable. Expensive, uncomfortable for what it was, inefficient – you get the picture. The beauty is that instead of being locked into one version of a story and hence, one solution, the smart planners looked elsewhere, improved on the old without trashing it, and there you have it.

Kind of reminds me of Amazon and Google looking at brick and mortar retail outlets and the proliferation of food carts and live concerts.

The smartest folks look back, look forward, and look up and down.

They don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater or automatically assume that all that preceded them was old, used up and bad.

Reminds me of what one of my favorite sources once wrote:

“When I was a boy of 14, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be 21, I was astonished at how much the old man had learned in seven years.” Mark Twain

It’s amazing how much we all learn in seven years. As much as things change and as much new as there is – somehow there is always room to learn from what was – and it seems to me that the smartest money always does.

So the next time you wear “retro” clothing or “retro” glasses, eat “retro” food or carry a “retro” bag – take a moment….

What do you think?

Monday, April 23rd, 2012

“Do No Evil”?

Anyone remember this Japanese parable?

Known as the three wise monkeys, they embody—“speak no evil, see no evil, hear no evil.”

Occasionally they are pictured with a fourth monkey with crossed arms representing “do no evil.”

There is a certain simplicity to the notion, and one that carries virtue in its practice – imagine if some of our anonymous digital bloggers and such practiced the “speak” and “do” portions….

Yet growing up, there was a view that the very simplicity of this proverb was in itself dangerous and could lead to a society of people who shut out reality and looked the other way when faced with injustice—as portrayed by this famously historic political cartoon:

All of which leads me to “Don’t Be Evil,” the (now becoming) infamous motto of Google, going back to their founding days.

When they first took on Microsoft, the line seemed a byword of the new digital generation and was a challenge and frankly a forced upon positioning to an (even by then) older and more traditional high-tech company that had long ago passed the stage of scrappy start-up.

Yet today “Don’t Be Evil” rings rather hollow when we discover that in the process of creating the amazing Street View, Google was also reading our private data (including passwords) as their digital photo units passed by our homes. Not to mention the role reversal, with Microsoft now looking like the pounded-upon and persecuted child.

Crazily—in my personal opinion—we seem to be making excuses for the corporate malfeasance of what we view as “new-age digital corporations,” giving them a pass for the kind of behavior that would cause us to bury an older, seemingly more “traditional” (how I hate that meaningless moniker…) company.

Google can read our mail, Amazon can sell our data, Apple can exploit poor workers, and all can do it in the name of bettering our lives and society.

I encourage you to read the following piece by Quentin Hardy, “Don’t Be Evil, But Don’t Miss The Train.” The questions laid out are critical, I believe, to the future of society:

Do unarguably phenomenally successful entrepreneurs have the right to dictate social change beyond the changes we ourselves are driving with the very products they have created?

And yes – while it is fair to argue that the changes brought about by the automobile and the airplane, not to mention Gutenberg and the printing press, took generations to develop while in today’s world we drive change in minutes – would we have wanted, would we have allowed Henry Ford to determine the social structure of a country because he was successful and had vision – you tell me….

Bottom line – I am concerned. Concerned when we look the other way, concerned when we make excuses, concerned when we don’t hold people in power accountable, and concerned when we allow analysts and others who have vested interests to cover our eyes, ears and mouths.

Let’s be clear – I don’t believe that Google is evil…but I do believe that we are all asleep at the switch. If we give people a pass—without any accountability—because they tell us that they are changing the world, where does it stop? Worse, just look back in history to get an idea of where it can go….

Perhaps it’s as my daughters would say – my pathetic wannabe aging hippy sensibility – or maybe because I recently bought a new children’s version of these lyrics in book form and taught my two grandsons (5 and 2) how to sing the words – but do listen:

“How many times can a man turn his head pretending he just doesn’t see….the answer my friend is blowing in the wind….” Bob Dylan

I also encourage you to listen to all the words – if you have forgotten them and even more so if you don’t know them – and all are invited to join Henry, Teddy and me next time we sing…

What do you think? The answer is blowing in the wind….

 

  • Michael Ramistella, what about all the patent war? is that just an accident to which they should apologize? Im pretty confident that there is no "evil" purpose behind all this data (and even patents) but the post has a really good point: if we just accept it, when will we know when/if the switch fiips? It made me think of ...
  • Did Google screw up with taking our information? Yes. Am I mad? Not really. Why? Because I don't think anyone at Google is dying to know the inane banter that goes on between my friends and I on our free time or what our plans to meet up for dinner after work are. Could they use that for who to ...