Tag Archives: Thoughts

The Courage to Stop

“Your genetic energy level enables your lack of discipline,” Rochelle continued. “Instead of leading a disciplined life, you lead a busy life.”

The Stop Doing List by Jim Collins

USA Today, December 30, 2003

Digital Scribbler recently completed the first step in our effort to develop a transformational Augmentative and Alternative Communications (AAC) App.

We call it Quick Talk.

During the final stages of development I ceased writing on my blog, rarely posted on Google+, and stopped any significant engagement on Twitter.

While this type of fierce simplicity is unusual for me, the fruits of the decision have been undeniable.  In a relatively short amount of time, we have successfully launched Quick Talk on all Android Tablets, the Kindle Fire, iPad, and iPhone.

Quick Talk is a project of passion launched from the heart.  I have a son with autism whose experiences gave me the idea, while the rest of our development team has been inspired in a variety of ways to contribute.   None of us embraced this project as a money making proposition, but instead believed we could change the world.

What we learned is that changing the world is possible, if those involved have the courage to stop.  Each one of us had to stop doing something in order to find the time to do this.

I now realize our passionate project motivated me to finally follow Jim Collins directive to develop a “stop doing list”.  Each one of us learned a busy life is not a disciplined life.  We learned a fully occupied life is not a purposeful life.

Looking toward 2012 I want to encourage you that anything is possible if you have the courage to stop.

 

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Making A Difference

Mayor Willie Brown and Russ Ewell

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.

Margaret Mead, US anthropologist (1901 – 1978)  

The future will only be as bright as our willingness to help others.  Helping others means valuing their needs as much or more than our own.  This is the spirit behind volunteering, and how anyone can make a difference.

Making a difference is not the same as making money, being successful, or getting ahead in any other way.   Making a difference is about changing lives, outcomes, or in exceptional cases the world.

Any change we want to make, will require that we nurture and grow this desire to make a difference.  We won’t get motivated, stay motivated, or be capable of inspiring others without this desire.

One occasion where I saw all these things come together was while volunteering in San Francisco.  I was part of a group working in conjunction with the administration of Mayor Willie Brown.

I learned five things from that experience, and believe anyone who implements them can make a difference in their community–maybe the world.

  1. Passion - select a cause which stirs your emotions
  2. Connection - volunteer with people you love
  3. Touch  - have close and regular contact with the people in need
  4.  Ambition - think big, start small, stay with it, and watch it grow
  5. Youth - get and keep the young involved or your effort will die
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Apple’s Worthy Competitor

In my recent post titled “The Paperback of Tablets” I wrote about my belief in the 7 inch tablet, as well as Amazon.   It is my belief that Amazon has the retail chops to successfully compete with Apple.   They understand the retail market better than Apple, and almost as well as Walmart.   My guess is they will be the company that takes the tablet into the mainstream, and a recent blog post by Nick Bolton increased my confidence in this prediction.

Mr. Bolton writes..

Amazon has also been working hard to offer a device that is competitively priced compared to other tablets. The person who works the company said Amazon plans to offer its Kindle tablet at a lower price than the Apple iPad, which costs between $500 and $830 depending on memory size and 3G capabilities.

To do this, Amazon is building its tablet with the bare necessities inside. Limiting memory capacity, peripherals and choosing to skip a built-in camera in the device, this person said.

According to an Amazon executive with close ties to Mr. Bezos, who could not be named because of his senior role in the company, Mr. Bezos made a decision after the iPad launched last year to try to lure customers onto the Kindle platform by offering less expensive devices.

There are only 14 million IPads out there, which means that there are millions 0f customers yet to be lured into the  market.   This tablet competition has only just begun, which is good for the consumer.   I wish Amazon luck, and hope they catch a vision for the 7 inch tablet…this is an untapped market Apple ignores.

Note:  The Motley Fool just supported this position saying, “Amazon Can Beat Apple

Note:  Reports that Kindle will provide Library lending proving Amazon understands the market in a way Apple doesn’t.

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The Paperback of Tablets (September 2 Amazon makes me look good)

Note:  Amazon is coming out with a 7 inch tablet that promises to revolutionize…Check it out

The seven-inch tablets are tweeners, too big to compete with a smartphone and too small to compete with an iPad.

Steve Jobs, Apples Earnings Call, October 18, 2010

I love Apple.  Steve Jobs inspires me.   I am not alone in these two sentiments.  My devotion to Apple and the creative genius of Mr. Jobs does not extend to the 7 inch tablet.  Here they simply lack vision.

Apple will regret their failure to develop a 7 inch tablet.  This decision provides an opportunity for a smart and clever competitor.  It is an opportunity to develop the digital paperback to Apple’s digital hardcover.  A new paperback revolution for digital times.

When we look back at the history of publishing some simple lessons standout.  Ownership of books was for the wealthy, so information remained in their hands.  Paperbacks changed all that by making books cheap and portable (The Paperbacking of America).

The publishing of paperbacks began in earnest during the 1930’s.  At that moment, publishers like Penguin turned book borrowers into book buyers.

“I would be the first to admit that there is no fortune in this series for anyone concerned, but if my premises are correct and these Penguins are the means of converting book-borrowers into book-buyers, I shall feel that I have added some small quota to the sum of those who during the last few years have worked for the popularization of the book-shop and the increased sale of books.”

Allen Lane, All About Penguin Books, The Bookseller, May 22, 1935

Allen Lane was the thought leader who established Penguin as the premier publisher of paperbacks, and ignited a revolution in mass market purchasing of books.

Poets.org  describes it this way…

Paperbacks changed all that, making books available in every train station, five-and-dime, and drugstore in the nation. Traditional bookstores initially resisted stocking paperbacks at all, not seeing the sense in underselling their own more expensive stock (just as most bookstores today stock new or used books, but not both). At first, bookstores would add a “paperback corner” or other small selection of the new kind of book, but soon economic demand overwhelmed snobbery and paperbacks came to dominate the literary marketplace.

This cheaper and more portable form factor took information from the distance of the library to the intimacy of the coffee table.   During the 1960’s cultural transformation, much of the great yet controversial writing of the time, relied on the less traditional publishers of paperbacks to spread their message.  Indeed it was true, “economic demand overwhelmed snobbery”, and the paperback helped change America.

The same snobbery that existed toward the paperback, can now be found in attitudes toward anything not IPad.  This includes most of all the 7 inch tablet, and yet I believe this tablet is the paperback of our time…the digital paperback.

While an argument can be made that the smartphone is the ultimate digital paperback, it is my belief that the screen real estate it provides is too small.  The increased screen real estate of the 7 inch tablet provides visual comfort in a lightweight and portable package.  You can do almost everything you would do with the larger tablets without the obtrusive size.

Which Apple competitor understands all this and more?  Which CEO among Apple competitors has an Allen Lane like understanding of the mass market?  Which Apple competitor in choosing to create their first device selected a screen of 6 inches?

The answer to all of the above is Amazon, and they are my choice for revolutionizing the tablet market.

While their first tablet may be a 9 inch, in time I look to Amazon to release a 7 inch, and if they fail to do it, then the opportunity for victory will fall to HTC or Barnes and Nobles.

The 7 inch tablet will survive and thrive, and Apple may pay severely if they ignore this truth.

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