Wirefly - Free Cell Phones + Free FedEx Shipping. All Backed by the Wirefly Satisfaction Guarantee.

Sunday, January 3, 2010

4G IPhone on Sprint?

All of the talk to date about the future of the IPhone in the U.S. has centered around Verizon. Sitting atop the number of subscribers heap at nearly 90 million customers Verizon is certainly a logical market for the IPhone. Sprint is a long way back in the number 3 spot with 47 million customers. That said why would Steve Jobs go for Sprint over Verizon? The answers to that question are many so let's get started...

First, do not underestimate the effect the "iDon't..." and "There's a Map for That." ad campaigns have had on Verizon's future with Apple. Steve Jobs takes anything anti-Apple as anti-Steve Jobs; and when you're an eccentric genius like Jobs let's just say that Verizon's ads are akin to "Them be fightin' words."

Furthermore, as evidenced by Apple's past and present carrier agreements for the IPhone, one thing is for certain: Apple demands control. To date all of Verizon's posturing and public statements about the IPhone have left little doubt that they are not willing to give Apple revenue sharing and other concessions Apple demands. (Remember that Verizon passed on the IPhone initially for those very issues, which of course led to AT&T landing U.S. exclusivity.)

Sprint, on the other hand, is likely to give Apple the farm if necessary to sell the IPhone. Sprint has been bleeding customers by the millions for serval years now due to a horrible customer service track record and a lackluster handset lineup. However, in the past year plus Sprint has made huge strides in improving customer service. Sprint's handset lineup has improved dramatically as well with the Palm Pre, HTC Hero, and others. Add to the list a new service pricing structure that is without question the best of any national carrier and it now appears that all these changes have at least stopped the bleeding. Sprint's stabilization could turn into an enormous boon with the addition of the IPhone.

Although Sprint's woes over the last few years have been covered widely under the radar they have continued to do what they do better than any carrier - network innovation. The most important innovation being their 1st to market position in the 4G race. Sprint's 51% controlling stake in Clearwire Inc. has made that a reality via WiMAX technology delivering average download speeds of 3-6 Mbps.

Sprint has 33 4G markets live including Chicago, Philadelphia, Dallas/Ft. Worth, Las Vegas, and Seattle. More importantly, with at least 5 huge markets to be added in the first quarter of 2010 - San Francisco, New York, Boston, Houston, and Washington D.C. Sprint is in the best position of any U.S. wireless carrier, hands down. It's worth mentioning that the San Francisco launch will undoubtably cover the Bay Area as a whole which includes Silicon Valley. (Apple headquarters in Cupertino, CA is in the heart of Silicon Valley just miles from San Francisco proper.)

WiMAX vs. LTE:
Both Verizon and AT&T have publicly commited to LTE (Long Term Evolution) as their 4G future; and it is just that: "in the future" and an indefinite one at best. WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access) through Sprint is here and now. There is some debate as to just how long it will take either Verizon or AT&T to bring LTE to market, yet the consensus is that it will be on the order of years, not months. In the world of wireless it goes without saying that 2 or perhaps 3 years is an eternity. With 2 years (or more) of 4G exclusivity Sprint has an extraordinary competetive advantage.

The IPhone 4G:
Thus as the only 4G carrier in the U.S. Sprint could help Apple deliver a 4G IPhone and while they're at it they could compel Sprint to make it the only WiMAX handset in their lineup in exchange for a multi-year CDMA exclusivity agreement. This would of course deliver a crushing blow to Google's Android platform - the only real competition the IPhone has had to date. Just think of the impact an IPhone surfing at true broadband speeds would have on the wireless landscape. Currently there is only one company that can make that a reality for Apple - that company is Sprint.



Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Simple Fix For Slow Mac Browsing

Despite adequate bandwidth tests via speedtest.net browsing on my MacBook was sluggish at best. Then I came across the following post on MacRumors Forums:

There have been a few threads lately about slow Macbook internet out of the box, with the Mac getting download speeds much slower than the PCs on the same network. I was finally able to fix this issue with my Macbook.

I have a new SR Macbook with Leopard preinstalled. Out of the box, the internet was about 1/4 as fast as my PCs, with both wireless and directly connected to the modem. Some people have reported changing the DNS servers to the openDNS.com servers under TCP/IP and the router solved the problem for them. It solved it partially for me, but internet was still quite slow.

I finally came across http://miranda.ctd.anl.gov:7123/

This can diagnose where the problem is on your network. For me, it said there was a duplex mismatch (host full switch, client half switch). It only said this on 3 of the 5 times I ran the test, since I believe it's an intermittent issue.

So I went to system preferences -> network -> ethernet -> advanced -> ethernet .. and changed the "automatic" setting to the following:

Configure: Manually
Speed: 100baseTx
Duplex: full duplex
MTU: Standard (1500)

This worked for me, and the wireless and direct-to-modem internet is screaming. I am using an Airport Extreme Base Station with Comcast cable modem. Hope this helps.

Its simple and web pages immediately began loading in a blink. So if you're experiencing slow browsing on your Mac give this a shot - it sure worked for me.

To view the full thread on MacRumors.com click here.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Environmentalism at Any Cost?

I have from an early age been an avid outdoorsman and nature lover. I firmly believe that we should all do our part to preserve what has been given to us from previous generations. Whether its recycling whenever possible or only keeping what we are actually going to eat from a fishing trip. That is being sensible and mindful of our actions and how they affect the environment is logical and practical. Leaving to our children an environment better off than when we found it; or at least in as good a condition as we found it is a moral imperative in my view. I'm sure that most Americans would agree with me on that.

However, this sentiment can, is, and has been used against us by an ever growing so called "environmentalist" movement that has brought with it catastrophic consequences. Let us first look at one of the more infamous examples of this - the 1972 ban on DDT.

DDT, short for dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, is a pesticide that was invented in 1874 but not put into widespread use until the early 1940's. DDT was found to be somewhat of a universal insect killer and deterrent. It was highly effective in that regard for agricultural pursuits which helped reduce crop damage and thus raise yields. Perhaps more importantly, it was found to be highly effective in controlling mosquitoes and as a consequence it nearly eliminated malaria in the United States and throughout much of the industrialized western world. It was so effective that most Americans today are unaware that malaria was ever a problem, yet before the adoption of widespread DDT use malaria was indeed prevalent in the U.S. killing thousands each year.

Then in 1962 Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring was published and therein she painted a grave and deadly picture of DDT use. Carson claimed that DDT was responsible for everything from cancer in humans to the eventual extinction of birds, hence the title Silent Spring as one day we would no longer here the birds singing in springtime. The Environmental Defense Fund (we'll touch on their role again later) and other radical environmental groups of the time took the torch Silent Spring lit and ran with it. These groups took up legal action with the EPA to see that DDT was removed from the market. However, after 2 years of hearings the presiding administrative judge Edmund Sweeney declared that:

DDT is not a carcinogenic hazard to man... DDT is not a mutagenic or teratogenic hazard to man... The use of DDT under the regulations involved here do not have a deleterious effect on freshwater fish, estuarine organisms, wild birds or other wildlife.

Despite the findings of the court the then head of the EPA, William Ruckelshaus (a member of the Environmental Defense Fund), overruled Judge Sweeney and unilaterally banned DDT in the United States effective January 1, 1972. The rest of the industrialized west followed suit and then came the UN backed worldwide ban.

If you were to Google "most deadly creature on earth" you would find many top 10 lists where 2-10 are somewhat varied. Yet the number 1 spot common to all those lists is the mosquito. How on earth can that be? One word: malaria. Malaria, which is chiefly transmitted by mosquitoes, kills MILLIONS of third world peoples - the most substantial number in Africa. Poorer nations throughout the world have been denied access to the most effective chemical (also the most cost effective) known to man in the combat of malaria for over 30 years - you guessed it: DDT. While some have placed the death toll over that 30+ year period as high as 50 million conservative estimates have the number around 27 million.

Did I mention that there has NEVER been any sound scientific evidence that DDT poses or did pose a significant threat to human OR animal life?

In 2006 the WHO (World Health Organization) finally ended its ban on DDT to enable third world countries access to the same life saving chemical we in the United States and elsewhere used to effectively eradicate malaria. Despite this the Environmental Defense Fund, one of the organizations chiefly responsible for the 1972 DDT ban, still hail the ban as a "A Continuing Success Story" as you can see from this post on their website. I ask you: how can the deaths of 27,000,000 fellow human beings be a success story?!

Think something like this can't happen again? Wrong. For years many scientists, politicians, and concerned citizens have been questioning the validity of man made global warming only to be characterized as "uneducated", "deniers", or "corporate cronies". That is until the recent discovery of emails and documents linked to "top" IPCC scientists who were in their own words distorting, changing, and even outright falsifying evidence to preserve their theory that man made climate change is real. And yet even with the science supporting man made climate change in serious doubt President Obama recklessly asserted that, "The time for debate is over. We must act now."

"...We must act now." Is a call to pass so called "cap-and-trade" legislation which would give the federal government control over carbon dioxide emissions - the alleged culprit of global warming such as it is. So let me get this straight Mr. President: despite alarming new evidence that underscores the position of thousands of scientists who do not agree that man made global warming is in fact a reality we need to move immediately to pass legislation that will cost the average family an additional $2,000 per year in taxes and higher energy costs during the deepest recession in over 30 years?! Additionally, we know that China, India, and other countries will not follow our lead. Thus we will effectively be engaging in unilateral economic disarmament since U.S. companies will by definition be saddled with higher costs than their emerging market competitors. Does this sound like good economic policy to you dear reader?

Another example of the dangers of environmental extremism is the current man made drought along the I-5 corridor in central California. The "drought" spawns from litigation filed by a left wing group the National Resources Defense Council or NRDC along with several other environmental organizations originally in 2006. The NRDC asserted that the pumps used to push water into the San Joaquin Valley were killing an endangered species - the two inch delta smelt. The NRDC sought to have the pumps turned off as an enforcement of The Endangered Species Act. They succeeded; and the victory for the delta smelt has lead to farm bankruptcies, thousands of jobs lost, and once proud hard-working farm hands have been reduced to standing in Great Depression like food lines.

During this struggle between environmental groups, farmers, and even the State of California itself the NRDC has continually characterized opposition as "distorting the issue" or derivations thereof when opponents have said this is a "man vs. fish" battle. They use a variety of falsehoods in an attempt to divert attention from the fact that this is very much indeed a "man vs. fish" battle. Let's address those diversions for a moment:

1. "This is about more than the delta smelt. The decline in the delta smelt population has caused the closure of commercial salmon fishing." - Wrong. Years of over fishing and mismanagement are the root of the salmon decline.

2. "Delta smelt aside there is a real drought in California and we simply don't have enough water to supply agricultural demands." That is true in part, however, that has ALWAYS been true - California's central valley is an arid region. The real problem has been a mismanagement of water resources, not an actual scarcity as such. To clarify for those who are unfamiliar with the region allow me to expand... The central valley, and much of California for that matter, has its water needs fulfilled mainly by a vast number of reservoirs that capture snow melting in the mountains that comprise the near entirety of eastern California. The water is held in these reservoirs until it is needed for individual or agricultural demands, which it then delivers through a series of rivers and aqueducts. This is all overseen by dozens of "Irrigation Districts". For comparison take the Oakdale Irrigation District or OID. The OID along with neighboring districts like the Turlock Irrigation District or TID are literally just miles away from the I-5 corridor where farming has been seriously affected and yet farms fed by the OID and TID are thriving with an abundant water supply. That being the case it is beyond ludicrous to claim that the problem is simply a scarcity of water. The water is plentiful rather it is years of mismanagement and poor planning that are at fault.

3. Finally and perhaps the most ridiculously hyperbolic diversionary argument is that the levies are crumbling which will inevitably lead to a catastrophic event wherein an earthquake destroy the levies. Then after the levies are destroyed saltwater from the San Francisco bay will overrun the San Joaquin delta thereby destroying the fresh water source altogether. While it is true that many of the levies are in need of upgrade and repair what on earth does that have to do with the current injunction stopping water from being released to farmers. Moreover, even if we were to stipulate to this highly unlikely earthquake turning fresh into salt water scenario would it somehow not occur if the levies were not there? This seems particularly antithetical and incoherent given that this far flung theory is based on the fact that it would be an earthquake destroying the levies that would in turn result in a sort of California dead sea.

As you can see debunking these diversionary arguments is rather easy. Therefore we are back to where we started - the two inch delta smelt is worth protecting at all costs if you're a radical environmentalist. To hell with those intellectually inferior farmers, their families, those they employ, and their employees families as well.

These are just three of countless illustrations that could be cited where environmental extremism and zealotry have caused unnecessary hysteria, thousands of jobs lost, massive economic dislocation, and in horrible cases such as the DDT story the death of millions of human beings. All under the auspice of seemingly harmless ideals like "going green". After all who could be against "going green" or preserving the environment?

At the outset of this post I offered the supposition that our common regard for the natural world is being used against us. In all three of the above disputes those who have not thrown in with the hard left of the "environmental" movement have been delineated as everything from "uninformed fools" to "corporate cronies".

In the final analysis, there are things we can and should do to pass onto our children and grandchildren a natural world that we have not unnecessarily ravaged. However, we must be practical and pragmatic in this endeavor. Furthermore, we should be certain of the scientific validity of any cause before, not after, we adopt radical measures. Additionally, preserving the natural world should always be tempered with a greater concern for what is of paramount importance: human life.



Sources and External Links:



Sunday, December 20, 2009

Elementary my dear Watson

The title of this post is a familiar part of the English lexicon, and for most it is probably the first thing we think of when Sherlock Holmes is mentioned. Yet it never appears once in the entire Sherlock Holmes collection.

" 'Elementary,' said he." - Taken from the short story The Crooked Man in the collection Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes is the one of the few times, "elementary" is used this way by Sherlock Holmes author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Conan Doyle uses: " 'It is simplicity itself.' " and derivations thereof many, many times in his depiction of Sherlock Holmes; yet it is the phrase, "Elementary my dear Watson" - never once penned by Conan Doyle himself that has come to signify and encapsulate the worlds most famous detective.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle the English physician/author developed the fictional super sleuth Sherlock Holmes in 4 novels and 56 short stories. The first was published in 1887 and the last in 1927. Doyle died three years later on July 7th, 1930.