Here’s this week’s show! Have a listen, and check out the download/subscribe links and detailed show notes below.
This week’s show is about 47 minutes long and weighs about 42MB (it’s a 128kbps MP3). You can download the file directly, listen using the streaming player above, or (BEST OPTION!!1!) subscribe to the Bit Stories podcast feed in your favorite podcast aggregator (like iTunes). If you subscribe to the feed, you’ll get each show delivered automatically as it becomes available - probably once a week or so, with the occasional bonus video or audio segment thrown in for fun. Plus, we’ll love you forever if you subscribe!
Here are some free-form notes and links for the stuff we talked about this week:
- Intel’s JF1 Workplace of the future. It isn’t soundproof.
Josh is not leaving Yahoo. - Intel’s Not Deploying Vista (NYTimes).
- It’s more complex and subtle than “Vista Sucks”. Really.
- Vista’s not really that bad - we’ve both used it. Stability, tablet features, etc. are much better than XP.
- Why is Josh not using Vista today? Because he switched to Mac. It’s not that he doesn’t like Vista, it’s that he doesn’t like Windows.
- Conspiracy Theory #1: Intel is creating a Linux distro for employees. All the big companies are doing it!
- Conspiracy Theory #2: Does Intel’s processor technology come from aliens? Did they tell us NOT to use Vista?
- Firefox 3 was released! It set the Guinness record for software downloads in a day - 8+ million. Their servers were smoking craters for a while. Speed, stability, new UI, and memory footprint are much improved?
- Is Firefox 3 threaded for multicore processors? We don’t know. Tell us!
- The use of the term “you can’t swing a dead cat without hitting…” Swinging a dead cat is not endorsed by Bit Stories. Besdies, Josh is allergic to cats, except Serious Cat.
- Snow Leopard news - GrandCentral, OpenCL, LLVM, and smaller app footprints.
- Is Snow Leopard still going to have Rosetta emulation for PowerPC binaries?
- Hard drives are only getting bigger and cheaper (can you even BUY a Mac with a drive smaller than 250GB?). So why reduce footprint? SSD (solid state disks).
- Pay more for Windows on a netbook, or keep the price the same and make the SSD bigger?
- SSDs are The Future, but they’re still WAY expensive (it’s a $999 option on the MacBook Air).
- How few moving parts there really are in a laptop (HD and fan)
- Where do you draw the line for legacy hardware support? Apple pushes the envelope because they control the whole stack. Microsoft has it a LOT harder, because they have to support such a wide variety of hardware.
- Are Mac users more forgiving when Apple drops legacy support (smacks us around) than when Microsoft does it?
- Josh cops to being an Apple fanboy
- It’s a miracle that Windows even works at all, given how many different hardware drivers (of varying quality) that it needs to support.
- Intel motherboards have finally dropped support for PS/2 ports. Josh is surprised in two directions - that they finally dropped them, and that they’re still around.
- Incompatibility doesn’t happen as much on Apple, because they control the whole stack. But control comes at the expense of competition.
- It’s amazing that Apple has let Psystar live for so long.
- Twitter and Friendfeed
- Twitter has problems.
- The term “Plurk-up” is just GROSS.
- Josh explains how FriendFeed sucks up and aggregates what your friends share, and let you have conversations around any of those things.
- Josh had been resisting FriendFeed, but two things pulled him in - the conversations that were happening, that he was missing out on, and social gravity. Josh goes where his friends, his network, are. Enough of them are on FriendFeed now to make it worth it.
- The joy you feel when you discover a new, efficient way to connect with people and read (RSS, Twitter, now FriendFeed)
- FFToGo.com - nice mobile version
FriendFeed is the source of all joy in the universe? - The addiction factor - isn’t FriendFeed just one more time sink?
- It’s a balancing act - you have to be judicious on what you follow - feeds, Twitter, or FriendFeed. But the social aspect (things bubble up) of FriendFeed make it more efficient/potent, so you don’t have to search and dig for the interesting/important stuff.
- The other obstacle - the “real time factor”. Interruptions - tweets pop up, distract.
- Josh and Brian both have major FOMO - Fear Of Missing Out.
- You have to train yourself to ignore, and to be compelled to read every. single. thing.
- Use tools like Summize to track your name, topics, so you don’t miss the REALLY important stuff, and then be OK with the fact that most of the rest of it is a river. Stand in the middle, let it flow by, grab what’s interesting when you have time/attention.
- FriendFeed helps with FOMO, because the interesting stuff bubbles up
- Brian and Josh argue about which of us is more ADD.
- Unread Item Syndrome - all these made up dysfunctions that we have…
- Use a client like Twhirl or Twitterrific.
- Be the boss of the tools, not the other way around
- Training for “social media tools for software engineers” that Josh is working on, Brian to be a Guinea Pig
- We can geek out over anything - never had a problem filling time.
Are you thrilled that the show is back? Mad that we changed something? Think we suck for being gone so long? Just want to say hi? Post a comment, and let us know! Seriously. We crave the validation that your feedback brings. You have no idea how fragile our self esteem really is…

I know exactly the cure, this should at least help laugh off the social media addiction issues, check out Firefox Addiction
One comment on the PS/2 thing: I only switched to a USB keyboard/mouse about 1.5 years ago on my first dual-core desktop, and even then, begrudgingly. When an unfriendly app pegs your CPU (a fairly frequent occurrence when developing software), USB input devices are serviced at a much lower priority than the PS/2 ports (which have a dedicated h/w interrupt just for input). Significant delays or even total input lockups can occur (depending on what else is affected), making it much harder to deal with the offending process/thread. It’s less an issue with multi-core processors- you usually need a couple of runaway processes at once to cause problems (though exactly that happened to me last week).
-Matt
@Matt - yes, there are times when the old legacy stuff does have an advantage. Most of my input devices (keyboard and mouse) are actually Bluetooth, which suffers from that same problem, with the added issue of susceptibility to weird RF interference.
The price we pay for progress?