September 29, 2007

Facebook finally implements the killer feature

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Was I the last person to notice?

Comments (2) -- Posted by: dtc @ 4:18 pm

September 24, 2007

Halo 3 Party

I dropped by the Halo 3 party at the Microsoft SVC campus tonight – being that it was just a building away it wasn’t exactly a stretch. Here’s a terrible photo I took of the tournament room:

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The person in the middle with the red shirt is Guy Kawasaki. I also ran into Scoble who I hadn’t seen in ages – and I walked by Shawn Fanning. It seemed to me that the reaction to the game was generally positive. Not being a Halo player, I’ll have to take their word for it. There were lots of kids – lots of them. They seemed especially excited. I’m not so sure about their parents though!

I also got a can of the Halo 3 Mountain Dew:

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Pretty cool event – I think sales of Halo 3 might be pretty good.

Hm. I think it’s time I got a new phone with a better camera.

Comments (1) -- Posted by: dtc @ 7:55 pm

September 22, 2007

Hotmail now offers POP Access for Hotmail Plus users

Some news from Hotmail:

Your mail is here, come and get it!: Hotmail now offers POP Access for Hotmail Plus users
A few months ago some folks on the team hatched a plan to finally offer POP and starting this week Hotmail Plus users ($19.95 a year) will be able to use POP access from any device. In the interest of transparency though I want to be clear that we have plans to offer POP to all users (all premium and free) but we aren’t ready to do that yet. I can’t comment on a timeframe for when free users will get POP, but we hope to do so within the next 12 months.

If you do take advantage of this premium feature and sign up for Hotmail plus you’ll also get an ad-free experience, more storage, larger attachment support, and a non expiring account.

And now you know!

Click here to post a comment -- Posted by: dtc @ 1:12 am

September 20, 2007

US Dollar and Canadian Dollar are almost equal

A few people at work (in Redmond especially) were buzzing about the fact that the US Dollar and Canadian Dollar are rally close to being equal:

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It wasn’t always this way:

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Ouch!

Click here to post a comment -- Posted by: dtc @ 10:36 am

September 19, 2007

"Shipment is being held by brokerage for reasons beyond UPS’ control"

Recently my company bought me a Thinkpad for work use to replace my current laptop. Those of you who know me know that I haven’t been to thrilled with my current laptop, so I’m just not going to talk about it anymore.

The wait for the Thinkpad to arrive has been painful! The ship date on Lenovo’s site changed on a daily basis – and then today it magically said “shipped”. Awesome!

Until I saw this:

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So close! Yet so far! This machine has managed to travel from Hong Kong to California – but now is mysteriously being held. Fortunately, I’ve seen this happen before – and I seem to recall it being released the next day. So with any luck, I should have a new Thinkpad by Friday.

I can’t wait!

Comments (2) -- Posted by: dtc @ 5:30 pm

September 16, 2007

"7 Stupid Thinking Errors You Probably Make" and Plane Crashes

I’ve been working on planning our long delayed Honeymoon (now at the end of the year). We’re going to go to Bangkok, Phuket, and Hong Kong. I’ve spent the last few days looking at going to Phuket. Needless to say this morning’s tragic headline caught my attention:

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Now, rationally speaking, air travel is still one of the safest forms of transportation. Nationally, over 42,000 people die a year on our roads – California accounts for over 4000 alone. Still, this headline didn’t exactly produce a warm fuzzy feeling.

This reminds me of this recent piece on lifehack.org – here are some snippets:

7 Stupid Thinking Errors You Probably Make

1) Confirmation Bias
The confirmation bias is a tendency to seek information to prove, rather than disprove our theories. The problem arises because often, one piece of false evidence can completely invalidate the otherwise supporting factors.

Consider a study conducted by Peter Cathcart Wason. In the study, Wason showed participants a triplet of numbers (2, 4, 6) and asked them to guess the rule for which the pattern followed. From that, participants could offer test triplets to see if their rule held.

From this starting point, most participants picked specific rules such as “goes up by 2“ or “1x, 2x, 3x.” By only guessing triplets that fit their rule, they didn’t realize the actual rule was “any three ascending numbers.” A simple test triplet of “3, 15, 317“ would have invalidated their theories.

2) Hindsight Bias
Known more commonly under “hindsight is 20/20“ this bias causes people to see past results as appearing more probable than they did initially. This was demonstrated in a study by Paul Lazarsfeld in which he gave participants statements that seemed like common sense. In reality, the opposite of the statements was true.

3) Clustering Illusion
This is the tendency to see patterns where none actually exist. A study conducted by Thomas Gilovich, showed people were easily misled to think patterns existed in random sequences. Although this may be a necessary by product of our ability to detect patterns, it can create problems.

The clustering illusion can result in superstitions and falling for pseudoscience when patterns seem to emerge from entirely random events.

4) Recency Effect
The recency effect is the tendency to give more weight to recent data. Studies have shown participants can more easily remember information at the end of a list than from the middle. The existence of this bias makes it important to gather enough long-term data, so daily up’s and down’s don’t lead to bad decisions.

5) Anchoring Bias
Anchoring is a well-known problem with negotiations. The first person to state a number will usually force the other person to give a new number based on the first. Anchoring happens even when the number is completely random. In one study, participants spun a wheel that either pointed to 15 or 65. They were then asked the number of countries in Africa that belonged to the UN. Even though the number was arbitrary, answers tended to cluster around either 15 or 65.

6) Overconfidence Effect
And you were worried about having too little confidence? Studies have shown that people tend to grossly overestimate their abilities and characteristics from where they should. More than 80% of drivers place themselves in the top 30%.

One study asked participants to answer a difficult question with a range of values to which they were 95% certain the actual answer lay. Despite the fact there was no penalty for extreme uncertainty, less than half of the answers lay within the original margin.

7) Fundamental Attribution Error
Mistaking personality and character traits for differences caused by situations. A classic study demonstrating this had participants rate speakers who were speaking for or against Fidel Castro. Even if the participants were told the position of the speaker was determined by a coin toss, they rated the attitudes of the speaker as being closer to the side they were forced to speak on.

Studies have shown that it is difficult to out-think these cognitive biases. Even when participants in different studies were warned about bias beforehand, this had little impact on their ability to see past them.

Click here to post a comment -- Posted by: dtc @ 11:59 am

September 6, 2007

Why confirming your flight isn’t a bad idea

The other day I decided to check to see if some better seats had opened up. I went to AA.com and was promptly told that my reservation had been canceled.

Yeah, that’s not good.

After some investigation, it turns out that the travel agency that Microsoft uses to book tickets didn’t complete the purchase, even though it appeared to me that it had been completed via the web ui - and they weren’t quite sure why.

Good thing I checked! Otherwise, that could’ve been a rather nasty surprise on the day of travel.

Click here to post a comment -- Posted by: dtc @ 8:00 am

September 4, 2007

Cars keep getting bigger and bigger: Honda Accord 2008

Since the incident back in January, I’ve kept my eyes open to new cars in the marketplace. One of my biggest disappointments is the fact that cars keep getting bigger and bigger. For example, the 2008 Honda Accord looks pretty snazzy and could be a good replacement for my wife’s car. Here’s a picture from Autoblog:

However, the dimensions of the Accord have grown so much that it’s now consider to be a large car by the EPA – instead of a mid-sized car. Apparently the 2008 model is 2 inches longer – does the Accord really need to be so wide and so long? Already it’s quite spacious interior-wise – especially the width. In the old days, a 72.7 inch wide car would have bench seating in the front to fit 3 people across!

While it hasn’t quite grown into a new category, the BMW 3 series has also grown in size. That’s one of the reasons why BMW is introducing the 1 series.

Let’s face it – parking spots aren’t exactly growing in size, roads and highways aren’t growing, so I wish car makers would hold some sort of line and stop competing on “largest”. In some ways I can’t blame them, I bet their product planners look at trends in American consumers and say “We need larger cars!” since everything else is always getting bigger.

Edit: In case you were wondering, the Acura TSX is actually what’s called a Honda Accord in Europe.

Comments (1) -- Posted by: dtc @ 8:00 am