Blog

Running since 2003. Posts about software, travel, and whatever else.

The ears of my grandfather

Do old men really have bigger ears, or does it just look that way once the hair retreats? My wife claimed habits magnify with age and I argued ears do too. The internet had opinions; my grandfather, who turned ninety in November, had decades of photographs. So I fired up Paint, pasted them side by side, and started measuring.

The Freedom to Work

People keep asking whether I miss the freedom of being my own boss now that I work for Google. Honest answer: I'm freer now than I was running my own company. The 20% rule gets all the press, but it turns out the other 80% works in a strangely similar way. Nobody checks when you come in. Weirdly enough, it works.

Another market bites the dust

CES is in full swing and gadget lovers everywhere are refreshing their favorite blogs. Nokia rules cell phones, Apple owns music, Sony still has the living room, TiVo has the DVR. But look one layer down at what powers the runners-up on every front and the same name keeps showing up. In a world of convergence, second place might be all Redmond needs.

Enough already with this Tsunami

Am I the only one, or is the Tsunami aid effort getting out of hand? The death toll is staggering and the generosity is real, but four million died in the Congo and nobody held a telethon. Aid budgets are not infinite. If we genuinely want to help countries in the long run, there are cheaper and more effective levers than competitive Christmas-week giving.

Happy New Year

New Year's resolutions are easy this year. You already know what you want to do; the credit card is already in your wallet. There's a button at the bottom of the page. Click it and start 2005 with something that actually matters.

Write your own travel guide

Five years ago, in a backpacker cafe in Kashgar, my brother and I started complaining about Lonely Planet. Couldn't the web do this better? An open travel guide that anyone could edit? We brainstormed on the bus over the Turugart pass and forgot about it. Then came a honeymoon train ride, two weeks of frantic coding, free beer at First Tuesday, and an investor who wanted a business model.

Foreign Aid is Theft

I am all for helping the Third World. I think solving global inequality would dissolve most of our other problems too. And yet there is something strange about foreign aid handed out by governments: it looks suspiciously like theft. Why do we tax in the first place, and what does building dykes in the Netherlands have to do with whether Robin Hood is a democrat?

No Chicken discrimination in Switzerland

It's the little things that change country to country. In the Netherlands, free-range eggs are always brown and battery eggs are always white. Discrimination, obviously. The marketing logic isn't hard to reverse-engineer: brown signals recycled, virtuous, slightly rough on the backside. Then I moved to Switzerland and the free-range eggs were white. So what does that say about the Swiss?

The end is neigh

Apparently the odds of dying in a plane crash are lower than dying in an asteroid strike that wipes out humanity. Sounds absurd. Run the back-of-the-envelope math, though, and the numbers line up rather neatly. Whether this should make you feel safer in airplanes or more nervous about the sky is another question entirely.

We Rock!

Google just announced plans to scan in fifteen million books from Harvard's library. The how is impressive engineering. The why is something else entirely. In an age when copyright, patents and trademarks are increasingly used to wall information off, suddenly the largest library in the world is about to become searchable from your couch. And it reminds me of a childhood grudge.

PyTivo

I don't watch much TV, but there are a few shows worth tracking down. Bittorrent handles the delivery; the trouble is finding the torrents in the first place. Some sites publish RSS feeds of new releases, which felt like the seed of an idea. So I wrote a little Python thing to scan them for me.

The Cost of Pessimism

The Cost of Pessimism

Everybody knows why Germany's economy is stuck: too few working hours, taxes too high, labor markets too rigid, an aging population. Everybody knows. Everybody is wrong. Look at the export figures and German companies are competing just fine. The real culprit is something subtler, and it's quietly setting up an unwind that could take the dollar, the housing market and the Euro with it.

On the dangers of drinking tea

On the dangers of drinking tea

Back from Sri Lanka, where the tea pickers earn about a euro a day and the hills are beautiful. But it wasn't always tea up there. It used to be coffee, which is picked by men, not women, and that small distinction in gender norms set off a chain of events that ended in civil war. Tea drinkers, pay attention.

Illusive reality

Illusive reality

A very weird little experiment. Click through, watch the short video, and count how many times the players in white shirts pass the ball. It sounds trivially easy, and it is. The interesting part is what happens after you finish counting and click the next link. Don't read ahead. Just try it.

Off to Sri Lanka

Off to Sri Lanka

Tonight we fly to Sri Lanka for a week. Yes, a week is too short. There's always someone insisting you don't really know a country until you've spent six months there. Maybe. But the planet is large, employer holidays are not, and I've come to take a more global view of this whole travelling thing. Here's to country number 85.

Googles not so secret sauce

Googles not so secret sauce

People ask me what I actually do at Google. That's secret, of course. Google is fond of secrecy, usually for good reasons. But every now and then something that feels like it should be locked away turns out to be a freely available academic paper. The Google File System is one of those. And there's another paper floating around that will really blow your mind.

The chair for the office

The chair for the office

As of today, the Zurich office is officially a Google office. We have our own massage chair. This is not a frivolous matter: per the founding decrees of Larry and Sergey, no Googler shall be more than thirty feet from food, caffeine shall flow unlimited, and there shall be a massage chair. And there is exactly one company in the world that makes the right kind.

On stupid programs and stupid humans

On stupid programs and stupid humans

The new apartment now has a dedicated media PC. To celebrate, I decided to switch from WinAmp to iTunes. Download, install, drag the music folder onto the library: smooth. Then iTunes failed to notice the files had moved, and I started clicking things to fix it. This is the story of how a perfectly reasonable sequence of clicks nearly destroyed my entire MP3 collection.

Vote advise for American readers

Vote advise for American readers

Every blogger seems to be doing it, so here goes. Bush is a man with a plan and wastes no time executing it. Kerry is uninspired and largely copies his opponent. Neither is exactly inspiring — but with the world divided, the budget surplus destroyed, and freedom under attack, the choice still comes down to one decisive factor.

The Need for Crap

The Need for Crap

Switzerland is expensive, sure — but ask a Swiss person and they'll tell you the quality is higher, so it evens out. They're wrong, and not for the reason you'd expect. Sometimes crappy is exactly what you need, and the absence of cheap options turns out to be a quiet tax on the poor.