Digital Lifestyles

Early Innovators / Pre-Emptive Laggards

What do you call someone for whom it's possible to be such an early innovator that they no longer are attracted to early ship-cycle products because their purchase simply defeats the motivation of innovation or traditional early adoption?

As an innovator / early adopter (actually, I was one of the very first ever people to be classified in this category) in the age of accelerated frequency tech product lifecycles, the terms are arguably no longer valid since current periods of early adoption are so short (or non existent), that what was the early majority phase has now shifted closer to product launch and now occupies what was the early adopter phase, pushing traditional early adopters backwards to the innovation phase and the poor old innovators are pushed even further back beyond to period prior to actual product release. Which kinda makes us either redundant or, at best, beta testers.

Which is fine when you're beta testing free things like Flickr. But it's a bitch when you have to pay for the priviledge of owning a piece of tech that's obslolete inside of four months. With bell curve frequencies going off the scale, gone are the days when tech lifecyle bell curves could guarantee early adoption cycles in months or even years.

For example, PDA's slowly evolved through the innovator adopter period for about 15 years before they finally hit the early adopter market.

Which is probably why I'm resisting my pangs to purchase an nice big LCD TV, and instead I'm happily tolerating the 32" widescreen conventional CRT TV I've had for 8 years now. I'd like an LCD TV but realise that it's such a volatile stage in the development of these products that tomorrow's (literally, tomorrow) models will be five times better and three times cheaper than today's.

So, the real LCD TV I really want to buy hasn't been invented yet, and until it does, I'm staying put.

So, I suppose that makes me such an early innovator that I've looped right around back on myself and I'm now conciously motivated to be in the laggard category. But in this context I'm clearly not a real laggard in the original Geoffrey Moore - Crossing The Chasm adoption cycle sense of the meaning. You could argue, I concede, that I'm not a true innovator and just more of a money minded early adopter.

But whichever category I'm now in, I ain't buying anything. Yet.

Expanded Virtual Workspaces

Extended DesktopLately I've been feeling mostly smug in an annoying and show-offy kinda way, about the fact that I finally got round to setting up my Dell notebook in the office to act as an extended display.

I've been aware of this feature in Windows XP since it came out in 2001 but, strangely, I never actually got round to trying it. I can't fathom why, it takes barely 3.5 seconds to make it happen.

Anyway, I tried it out last week and I'm quite pleased with the added dimension of another desktop space to play with alongside my regular LCD display.

You don't realise it as such, but if you spend as much time perched in front of a windows desktop as I do, adding another 30% worth of desktop space in this way is like building a large extension to your home. This new virtual space in your life feels odd at first as you work out what uses to put it to. But eventually, your brain gets used to it and before long you'll forget what life was like without it.

When I spent a couple of days on the Microsft campus in Seattle back in 2003, I had a tour of their museum of the future thing where they had various prototype mock-ups and so on, and one of the best things they had was this convex screen (or perhaps concave, depending on whether you are stading in front of it or behind it, I suppose) which had various desktop widgets scrolling across it's panoramic expanse.

Another five years and I'll wager we'll all have extended virtual workspaces. And ironically, we'll probably need to extend our physical spaces to fit them in after all.

Life Servers Part II : A Solution

I mentioned a couple of weeks ago about my evolving digital lifestyle technology requirements. My current PC is a four years+ old 1.2GHz job, with a 2001 vintage graphics card and about 100GB of hard disk space over three disks and all the usual DVD writer gubbins. But the firewire card is not working as it should and it's only super slow USB 1.0 and so on and so forth.

The older it gets, the more fearful I am of the whole lot getting tubed and my personal digital assets going down with it, not helped by the strange noises and groans it develops from time to time.

So, I've got all my MP3 collection and 9 gigs of digital photos backed up onto my iPod. Which is better than nothing but I could easily lose the iPod while I'm out and about. The new PowerBook only has a 60GB disk and whilst it can certainly hold a further backup of everything I really need, I'm sure it'll finally start to complain whenever my blob like personal media needs get too uppity for it to handle.

So, as I said I need a form of digital lifestyle server but having just divested myself of all Windows interests for day to day home use in favour of the Mac, the prospect of buying a Windows PC just to use it as a server seems incongrous not to mention pricey. The cheapest suitably specced Dell server comes in at about £500-£600 minus lots of glamour spec items.

And the Power Macs are just too bloody expensive, particularly compounded by the fact that I rarely sit anchored to a desk at home, preferring to use the PowerBook wherever and whenever it suits me.

So, I've specified myself a compromise solution and purchased a NAS (Network Attached Storage) device in the form of a Buffalo LinkStation which consists of a 250GB disk in a standalone box with an ethernet socket and USB printer sharing all in one.

Meaning my WiFi home network now has 250GB of always on storage with automatic scheduled backups, disposing of the need to have the old PC switched on just to be able to access its disks, and I can wait another few months for either the price of the PowerMacs to drop or for a more suitable WiFi server cube product to appear. Probably a G5 spec Mac Mini with better gfx an storage than the Mac Mini version 1.0 spec which I'll wager will show up at the back end of this year, early next.

Plus if I wanted to, I could fit the whole shebang inside a shoebox somewhere out of sight in our home, freeing up the traditional home office desk space.

A postmodern reality dripping with fantastically recursive, circular irony given that 25 years ago, most of our old hard copy family photos would have been sitting inside the self same shoebox.