Archive for April, 2007

Apple announces Q2 earnings and stock surges above $100

appleq2financials.jpgIn contrast to my previous post, here’s a positive post about financial news: Apple Inc., better known to, well, everyone, as Apple, has announced its Q2 earnings this afternoon, and they’re pretty amazing at $0.87 EPS, which is up from $0.47 EPS in the year-ago-quarter, and $5.26 billion and $770 million in quarterly revenue and net profit, respectively. Apple has also sold 36% more Macs and 24% more iPods since last year. Plus, the Q2 earnings beat the $0.64 EPS analyst expectation by $0.23. What this means: Apple’s still growing and thriving, and its stock price has surged, going up $7.10 (7.45%) in after-hours trading at the time of publishing, all the way to an all-time-high (not including previous highs today in after-hours trading) of $102.45. So, whether you’re an Apple fan, shareholder, or both (like me), this’ll be good news to you’re ears.

Note: Apple has also announced that it’s not going to fight with ex-CFO Fred Anderson (who accused Steve Jobs of being responsible for the stock options scandal).

Note 2: From TUAW: “During this afternoon’s financial conference call, Apple CFO Peter Oppenheimer announced that a third Big Apple store is being planned. It’s been suggested that this building at 401 West 14th Street will be the third store’s location. At 52,000 square-feet, it would house one heck of a store.” And yes Dave, as you pointed out in your post, New Yorkers do get everything. Except free municipal Wi-Fi. And driving distance from Apple, Google, digg, Macworld and more headquarters. Damn you San Francisco!

Daily Digest for 04/24/07

Boris Yeltsin dies

24yelstin-190-2.jpgThe New York Times:

Boris N. Yeltsin, the burly provincial politician who became a Soviet-era reformer and later a towering figure of his time as the first freely elected leader of Russia, presiding over the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the demise of the Communist Party, died yesterday in Moscow. He was 76.

Yes, Boris Yeltsin, Gorbachev’s successor is now dead. So, what’s the big deal? Well, like Gorbachev, Yeltsin was an economic reformer. Of course, he was also a drunk and chaotic leader. Still, he was better than the current Russian president, Vladimir Putin, who’s reversing all of the economic and political progress that Gorbachev and Yeltsin made. By recreating the fear of the Cold War-era Soviet Union and causing the entire country to rely on petroleum for money, Putin’s slowly been bringing Russia back to its dark ages. The death of Yeltsin, who tried to do everything that Putin didn’t do, is a symbol of this tragedy.

Daily Digest for 04/23/07

Digest Note of the Day: Another feature, where I say a little something of note before the digest. Today’s is that a lot of the things in the Digest (anyone have a better word than “things in the digest?”) come from my del.icio.us and Twitter accounts, and that the Digest now appears on my tumblelog.

Yom HaZikaron and Yom HaAtzmaut

Today marks Yom HaZikaron, or Israeli Memorial Day (literally, Day of Remembrance). The holiday, like its American equivalent, honors those who died in combat. But this holiday is different from the American one in almost every way. In America, Memorial Day has very little actual significance. For most people, it means a three-day weekend, a barbecue/picnic, and car sales. In Israel, on the other hand, the exact opposite takes place. Like Yom HaShoah, a siren is played for a minute throughout the country, ceasing all activity, including car traffic on highways. Most shops and stores are closed, and normal television and radio programming is replaced with documentaries and solemn music.

But why is this the case in Israel, and not the U.S.? Even if we assume that the U.S. is too large to handle a one-minute shutdown, why can’t we still treat Memorial Day with just an ounce of respect? Is it because America’s much more diversified than Israel? Perhaps, but I think it’s more a result on an overall less-patriotic American culture. Really, after Vietnam, the Democrats gave up patriotism and left it to the conservatives to claim as their own. This, with a combination of post-WWII consumerism, resulted in a distanced, uncaring American people in terms of remembering war heroes.  And this isn’t just a Western issue. Look at the British, for example. The English are very attached to the soldiers who died in World Wars I and II. This is because Britain, unlike the United States, fought all the way through both world wars, and lost many lives to the harsh conditions of trench warfare and the horrors of the Blitz. In the Imperial War Museum in London, there is a terminal where, similarly to Yad Vashem, you can look up the names of loved ones who died in World Wars I and II. Most British natives can name at least one, and probably many more, persons who died in action, just as Israelis can. The Israelis and British have also had foreign attacks on their soil within the last 65 years. Now compare that to the U.S., in which the last battle on its homeland was 150 years ago, in the Civil War. How can we as Americans feel the pain of lives lost more than a century ago? Well, it may be hard, but at least we can try.

The second part of this post is about tomorrow’s holiday, Yom HaAtzmaut. Yom HaAtzmaut, or Israeli Independence Day, corresponds to American Independence Day, or the 4th of July. Similarly to Memorial Day, the 4th of July doesn’t really have that much actual value at all, though it has more than Memorial Day. The other major difference between Yom HaAtzmaut and the 4th of July is the connection to Memorial Day. Yom HaAtzmaut always comes directly after Yom HaZikaron, while Memorial Day is consciously about a month away from July 4th. In Israel, when the sun falls and Yom HaZikaron ends (Jewish days go from sundown to sundown), the entire country erupts into a huge party for Yom HaAtzmaut. From death to rebirth. And the fact that Yom HaShoah was only last week is no coincidence, either. From the death of the Holocaust and Israeli soldiers comes the birth of a nation. From death to rebirth, to life. Such is the story of the State of Israel.

Daily Digest for 04/22/07

This is the first in my new “Daily Digest” series, which is basically a daily collection links and anything going on in the world or my personal life that I don’t have time to do full posts out of. It will go online every day at 8PM, and here’s today’s:

  • It’s Earth Day! If you really want to go green and live in New York, get ConEd Solutions for 100% clean energy in your house.
  • MacApper breaks the news about Panic’s new app without their permission: Tisk, tisk tisk, MacApper. See MacUser tomorrow for an op-ed by co-editor Derik DeLong.
  • Yesterday is the one year anniversary of me being hit by a car. I also almost lost my backpack yesterday on a city street, which had, amongst other things, my address and keys. April 21st is cursed.
  • Set up my new blog homepage!
  • Set up Twitter Tools on my blog, which is awesome (props to Austen for help on getting it not to mess up Sidebar Modules).
  • Went on my first bike ride of the season with Austen.
  • Set some more stuff up in Ubuntu.

OS X User Challenges Others To See If People Can Hack His Server

Too bad my hacking experience=0.

read more | digg story

Do some spring (hard drive) cleaning with GrandPerspective

0 97-Foldersbujumbura
Note: This applies to Mac users only. If you run Windows, buy a Mac or install Ubuntu. If you run Linux, good for you.
If you’re a Mac user and start to notice that your hard drive’s getting clogged, there’s a few things you can do. One is get an extra drive. Or, if you don’t want to cough up the cash, you can just go through your hard drive and clean out all of the unnecessary junk. Of course, this is easier said than done, so you can get some programs to help. One, OmniDiskSweeper, is a free app that simply gives you a folder hierarchy in order of the amount of space each folder/file takes up. While this works well, some people may want to visually see how much space their data takes up. That’s where GrandPerspective comes in.

GrandPerspective is simple: the free app scans any drive or folder, and then creates a grid of squares with proportional sizes to much drive space they take up. You can also change how squares are colored (the default is by folder), and what the color palette is. Overall, GrandPerspective works very well and is a great aid to cleaning up your hard drive.

[via MacUser]

OS X User Challenges Others To See If People Can Hack His Server

Well here an OS X user has setup apache on and is running it allowing full access to it from the internet. In case you can’t get to it from the cnet comment, here’s the link: http://24.8.244.176/ Will this mac user be proven wrong?

Props to the Pops: “In the Diaspora”

sf_205.jpgThis is the first post in my new series “Props to the Pops,” which links to some of the many articles that my father (see right)writes which I actually read find particularly interesting. This article, In the Diaspora: Hallowing helplessness,” from The Jerusalem Post, talks about the Yom HaShoah speaker at my school (who also spoke that nights to parents), and how he conveys the Israeli idea of Yom HaShoah instead of the American one. Here’s how it begins:

When Michael Weinstein introduced his father, Edi, as the speaker for a Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony at a Manhattan day school, he used an unexpected adjective. The word was “optimistic,” and it is a quality of character one hardly associates with a Holocaust survivor.