Labels: architecture, HBCU, history, morris brown, photograph
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
7:37 PM - Fountain Hall - Morris Brown College
I just found out that historic structure located at Morris Brown College in Altanta, GA was designed by architect GL Norman. You can find more info here.
Monday, February 11, 2008
6:11 PM - For those of you with a Blackberry...
FOXNews...
“CrackBerry” addicts were looking for thumbthing to do late Monday as BlackBerry smartphones throughout North America went on the blink.
A major service outage afflicted users of the popular, addictive BlackBerry smart phones across the United States and Canada on Monday, wireless carriers said.
Officials with AT&T Inc. and Verizon Wireless said BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd. told them customers of all wireless carriers were affected.
It was not immediately clear how many BlackBerry subscribers had problems, as some users reported being able to access their service normally Monday afternoon.
The BlackBerry service, which lets users check e-mail and access other data services on their handheld devices, has become a lifeline for many business executives and is increasingly popular among consumers with models like the BlackBerry Pearl.
There was no word what caused the outage or when service would be restored.
RIM officials did not return phone calls.
Friday, February 08, 2008
2:58 AM - Sexual Healing - Marvin Gaye
This was really good music back in the day. It still is in fact!
Monday, February 04, 2008
10:13 PM - Re-Vlog: The Southwest Chief
I already posted this video here as a YouTube vid (I just realized that all you got to do is scroll down from this post). I just wanted to use it again but this time I wanted to use the embed feature from Blip. If you want to download it here's WMV and FLV.
The first time I ever embedded a Blip.tv video over at It's My Mind was this evening. Ladies and gentlemen if you care, Super Tuesday is upon us!
Labels: train, travel, video, video blog
Friday, February 01, 2008
7:23 PM - Motorola's wayward path
This is a mobile blog of sorts. So maybe I should do mobile news here. So from the Chicago Tribune today is a story about Motorola and how they may sell off their cell phone business...
It was shortly after Motorola Inc.'s Edward Zander declared "more Razrs" that the mantra started to backfire.I like Motorola so they'd better get it together quick!
Zander, then CEO of the Schaumburg-based technology giant, was riding a stupendous crest in July 2006 when he was asked what was next for Motorola after the hit Razr mobile phone.
"More Razrs," he said. "It is something we are going to continue for quite some time."
Competitors followed suit, turning the thin, must-have phone into a commodity now found for free.
Nothing has been the same since for struggling Motorola, which said Thursday it is considering restructuring the company, including whether to separate the mobile phone division from its other businesses. That means Motorola, one of the most prominent names in technology, could exit the phone business it pioneered by seeking a buyer.
The problems for the tumbling phone division are complex, but one thing is clear: It was a fateful decision to exploit the Razr's success with a series of phones -- the Krzr, Rizr, Slvr, Q and now Razr 2 -- that mimicked the Razr's style but not its original cachet.
The company couldn't follow up with another breakout hit, market share and the stock price have plummeted, Zander left the top job in December and now the future of the company is uncertain.
"Motorola lost their way," said Karen Norkus, a senior sales representative for a Chicago Verizon Wireless store. "Customers started shying away from them because there was never anything strong after the Razr."
Customers also aren't clamoring for the Q smart phone, she said, noting that she sold three BlackBerry models on Thursday.
"Sales for Motorola's smart phone have gone down," she said, referring to sales at her Michigan Avenue store.
Aza Raskin, a Chicago software designer who recently joined the Mozilla Foundation, a Web programming concern, said Motorola seemed to rest on its laurels.
"If you talked to people when the Razr first came out in 2004, they loved how thin it was. It had a sexiness to it," he said. "It was groundbreaking but they couldn't follow up.
"So the question is, 'What comes next?'"
'Beholden' to carriers
And in Raskin's view, he would work on breaking down Motorola's reliance on providing U.S. wireless carriers with products to suit their needs, and focus on meeting consumer needs, as mobile phone-makers do elsewhere.
"The cell phone-maker is beholden to the carrier in this country," he said. "I know Motorola has a lot of cool stuff in its labs. I've seen it. But it must be frustrating because they have to make what the carriers want."
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