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Blasphemy in Ireland

So it looks like an atheist group is challenging a new Irish law that gives the government the power to enforce a much older law against blasphemy.
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/04/new-irish-blasphemy-law-broken/?p…

Seriously? We haven’t had enough trouble with religious nut jobs in recent years to realize that religion is the problem, not the solution?
This quote from Michael Nugent, co-founder of Atheist Ireland says it well: “medieval religious laws have no place in a modern secular republic, where the criminal law should protect people and not ideas.” The article suggests that since Christian groups, which are obviously the majority in Ireland, made no request for this new enforcement, “the government may have been acting mainly to restrain any Irish publisher from following the lead of the conservative Danish paper in offending Muslim sensibilities.” In other words, Irish papers may be tempted to republish cartoons of Mohammed, so we have to make it illegal to say Jehovah at the dinner table.Fear is the driving factor. Ireland is afraid of Muslim riots.

You don’t combat fundamentalist religion with more religion. You fight it with education. You fight it with science and common sense. Fundamentalism only thrives in ignorance. Why do you think going to an Ivy League school in this country still gets you labeled a pointy-headed intellectual latte-sipping wuss? Knowledge has always been the enemy of organized religion. And organized religion has always been the easiest way for governments to control people.

Apple Tablet Speculation Heating Up

The tablet speculation is heating up, as expected. Between now and January 26th, it’s going to be really crazy. Two recent articles caught my attention recently. One, from MacInquirer, is poking fun, but will probably end up being incredibly accurate:

[Apple Tablet Specs Mystically Revealed](http://macinquirer.com/files/e3b1cf90bc2fb7faec39de4298fd6455-135.html#unique-entry-id-135)
The other, from John Siracusa, is well-thought out and practical. In other words, it’s not full of crazy nerd wishes that not only will not come true, but shouldn’t. 
[Antacid Tablet](http://arstechnica.com/staff/fatbits/2010/01/antacid-tablet.ars)
Keep both of these articles in mind as you read the insane predictions coming from all sides over the next three weeks. When someone tries to convince you that the “iSlate” will make you waffles, wax your car, and cost $20, you’ll be able to keep your expectations in check. 
Remember, when it comes to rumors, there’s the old fun stuff based on nerd dreams, and then there’s the “analysts” who want to build up a rush of expectation and profit on the disappointment. And then, buried amongst all that, one or two realistic articles from smart people. 
Personally, I can’t wait to find out exactly where this device is going to fit into my workflow. If it allows me to switch to a big iMac at home and drop my laptop for the tablet for basic portable functionality, I’ll be very happy. I figure, the tablet plus an iMac will probably come out to about the same price (give or take a couple of hundred bucks) as a 17″ MacBook Pro. While I don’t expect the tablet to be as powerful as that MacBook Pro, of course, the iMac will be far more powerful. Which means I get a much more powerful computer at home where I need it most, and I still get to do some work at the coffee house. How much work will depend on how much more powerful the tablet is than an iPhone. 

More Nexus One Reality Checks

More pundits are coming around to the fact that the Nexus One is nothing special. The latest from Jeff Bertolucci posted on Macworld:

“It’s a me-too smart phone, not one that’s going to turn the cell industry on its ear.”
Rather than admitting that Google has no power to change the world of smart phones, though, Bertolucci instead expresses hope that Google has something more up its sleeve: Ad-based calling plans. 
That’s right, instead of paying full price for cell phone service, you can listen to ads every time you want to make a call. 
WTF? Are you serious? Ads during my conversations?  
I make it a point to use technology wherever I can to eliminate ads in my life. I never watch live TV. I use ad blockers in my browsers. I’m just dumbfounded that people are willing to sell their attention to the highest bidder, rather than pay a few dollars for the things they like to use. 
If Google wants to be the king of all the cheapskate, attention-for-sale customers of the world, they’re more than welcome to it. I’ll stick with Apple’s approach of paying for the privilege of avoiding ads. 

Nexus One (of many in a long line of Android fails)

So Gizmodo has the scoop on more details for the upcoming Nexus One phone from Google/HTC. My favorite quote:

“They’re not going to save us from the ‘making money off of hardware’ culture we’ve got right now, so this is basically just another Android handset, albeit a really good one”

Which is exactly what I said [a few weeks ago](http://jcieplinski.posterous.com/googles-nexus-one). Nexus One is just another Android phone. It’s not some revolution in handheld computing, a break from the tyranny of the big TelCos. It’s not even a Google branded phone. It’s just another phone made by HTC and sold through T-Mobile. You can order it unsubsidized through Google’s web site (for $580), but even then it appears that Google wants to make sure you know it’s an HTC phone, not a Google one. And even then, if you’re in the US, the only carrier you’ll be able to use it on is T-Mobile. 
So another Android phone it is, one that will probably do a lot more to hurt Droid sales than iPhone sales. 
The pattern remains: 
- a new Android phone is rumored.  - It immediately is pronounced the “iPhone Killer”.  - It gets rave reviews from “people in the know”, long before it’s actually released.  - It gets released, with much fanfare but few sales.  - Apple has a record quarter for iPhone sales and increases its market share lead - The next Android phone is rumored.  - Rinse.  - Repeat. 
Meanwhile, everyone who bought the last Android phone is stuck with an older version of the operating system, which is missing features and can’t be upgraded until the carrier allows it. Good luck, Droid users, waiting for Verizon to approve an OS upgrade on your phone. There are a lot of Windows Mobile users who’d like to sell you a bridge or two. 
It’s no wonder Verizon rose the price for canceling the contract early. (T-Mobile appears poised to do the same with Nexus One.) It’s as if they are admitting that buyer’s remorse is virtually guaranteed. 
I used to think that Google was up to something clever with Android, but now I’m starting to agree with [Daniel Eran Dilger](http://www.roughlydrafted.com). Android is just a mess. 
It’s hard to believe a company that hires nothing but PhDs could make so many painfully obvious mistakes in its business plan for Android. The entire strategy seems to be “copy every wrong move Microsoft has made in the last ten years.” 
Unless Google doesn’t really want to make phones, or even maintain an OS for phones. Maybe they really do just want to kill off Microsoft and then get out of the phone business altogether, since Microsoft is the only company in mobile phones that discourages Google services. 
One thought that keeps coming back to me: all of Apple’s success this decade isn’t as easy as Jobs makes it look. Three years after the announcement of the original iPhone, and not one serious competitor has arisen from all the great tech companies worldwide. That’s astounding to me. Palm made a great OS and a nice couple of phones, but doesn’t have the financial backing to make a big push in the market. RIM is smart enough after a couple of poor attempts at copying to stick with it’s core customer base and not try to compete with the iPhone directly. Everyone else is still floundering in some way or other. 

A final nature stop

Last nature stop of the trip was just north of Valencia, in the Angeles forest. Pyramid Lake was officially closed on Christmas, but we snuck down past the gates for a look.
[![Img_0629](http://posterous.com/getfile/files.posterous.com/jcieplinski/VlSAPanH86ApXhF34uIu1ofaYyI0ujBJtgCew3ei0D0FxcOdAMTME4txSYlA/IMG_0629.jpg.scaled.500.jpg)](http://posterous.com/getfile/files.posterous.com/jcieplinski/lJlKAogf1ArkNk1HA91EnnzPtu4H8aamZkoYlOBpMgDcorqXz1joKvLbvLvA/IMG_0629.jpg.scaled.1000.jpg)