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WHAT I'M READING NOW

  • Barton Gellman: Angler: The Cheney Vice Presidency

    Barton Gellman: Angler: The Cheney Vice Presidency
    I am early in reading this book, but so far Cheney comes across as the ultimate FU VP; at once highly aggressive in establishing his position, smart and thorough in setting up and vetting his conclusions and incredibly calculating at routing around people and process to secure his desired outcomes. This guy must have read Machiavelli more than once.

  • Douglas Preston: The Monster of Florence

    Douglas Preston: The Monster of Florence
    Gripping true story of a serial killer who preys upon young couples in the throws of lovemaking in the hills of Tuscany (I'm not exaggerating), and the efforts to catch him/her. Lots of compelling backstories on Italy, Italian culture and the convoluted legal and policing system there. If you've visited these spots, it adds another dimension (albeit a very dark one) to an otherwise idyllic canvas.

  • Joe Simpson: Touching the Void: The True Story of One Man's Miraculous Survival

    Joe Simpson: Touching the Void: The True Story of One Man's Miraculous Survival
    Gripping, jarring story of the power of the human spirit, and will to survive in the face of almost certain death. Into Thin Air meets Shackleton's Incredible Voyage

  • Anna Politkovskaya: Putin's Russia: Life in a Failing Democracy

    Anna Politkovskaya: Putin's Russia: Life in a Failing Democracy
    A tragic picture of a Russia that was presented a glimmer of light following a long bout with communism. In the end, it was an Icarus, and proved too much for the government and the people to contend with. Something fractured, and Russia succumbed to moral corruption and organized criminal activity. That the author gave her life to tell the story (she was assassinated) only adds to the hardness of what's being chronicled. Very concrete stories bring to life the Chechen conflict, how influence is bought, how assets are accumulated and defended. Mostly sadly, they also show how completely the Russian people seem to be left with a sense of powerlessness, abandonment, and confusion on how things could be any different.

  • Burton G. Malkiel: A Random Walk Down Wall Street: Completely Revised and Updated Edition

    Burton G. Malkiel: A Random Walk Down Wall Street: Completely Revised and Updated Edition
    Excellent, highly readable book that in layman's terms makes sense of stock market, from bubble logic and history of same to different models for analyzing stock valuation, etc. Largely concludes that index funds are best path for predictable, reasonably safe but meaningful, return on investment dollars.

  • Charles M. Madigan: -30-: The Collapse of the Great American Newspaper

    Charles M. Madigan: -30-: The Collapse of the Great American Newspaper
    As old media unravels, it gives rise to something else, something new that while on one level is a wonderful thing, on another represents a loss of our core fabric. Newspapers are the 'Exhibit A' example of the great unraveling of Old Media and this book does a good job in a readable fashion of articulating why.

  • Felix Dennis: How to Get Rich: One of the World's Greatest Entrepreneurs Shares His Secrets

    Felix Dennis: How to Get Rich: One of the World's Greatest Entrepreneurs Shares His Secrets
    Sage, simple, clear and actionable truths. Poetic tone of an earnest pursuit to getting rich. Straight-up delivery, including decisions made, outcomes realized and lessons learned. A joy to read.

  • Dan Koeppel: Banana: The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the World

    Dan Koeppel: Banana: The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the World
    Excellent, enjoyable read on the banana as a much loved fruit, the cultivation and growing science behind same and the true dark meanings behind the 'banana republic' moniker.

  • Philip A. Fisher: Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits and Other Writings (Wiley Investment Classics)

    Philip A. Fisher: Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits and Other Writings (Wiley Investment Classics)
    I am a Ken Fisher nut (read his columns in Forbes - GREAT!), and Phil was Ken's dad. This book was written in late 1950's, yet all of the concepts are timely, the antithesis of the get rich quick, trend-o-month finance books. Good constructs for thinking about business in general (in addition to investing). Somewhat dry writing style.

  • Marty Neumeier: Zag: The Number One Strategy of High-Performance Brands

    Marty Neumeier: Zag: The Number One Strategy of High-Performance Brands
    If you have read classic business books like Crossing the Chasm, Innovator's Dilemma or Built to Last, you can probably skip this book, which is a reasonably well written consolidation of best practices around market segmentation, positioning and product delivery. Nice title, though, and some effective metaphors which are intuitive and specific.

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The Chess Masters: Apple versus Google

Chess_masters
“The simple, obvious truth is that both Apple and Google have atypical strategies and cultures, and both companies have achieved atypical results. Imagine that.”

Such is the counter-punch by Daring Fireball’s John Gruber in his memorably titled, ‘How Leander Kahney Got Everything Wrong by Being a Fucking Jackass,’ a posting which rips apart the logic of Wired Magazine's recent article on the re-birth of Apple titled, ‘How Apple Got Everything Right By Doing Everything Wrong.’

Gruber is dead-on when he says that it’s ludicrous to conclude that it’s somehow surprising that Apple has succeeded despite being different than Google, or that Google is somehow representative of a typical Silicon Valley company, when it is not.

As I asserted in my post, ‘iPod touch: take two,’ Google and Apple pretty much are without peers in terms of their ability to ‘Think Different’ enough to play the disruptor role across the entirety of the media, mobile, PC and Internet segments; industry segments which once were impenetrably different, but no more.

While both companies are indeed so very different in the particular approaches that they employ to success, they’re actually very much alike in the game-changing outcomes they yield and the almost-religious fervor they inspire.

They are the Chess Masters of this particular point in time, and as such, destined for a showdown in the year or so ahead. 

In fact, when I wrote my post back in February, I wondered aloud whether “given their respective mammoth ambitions, are ‘friends’ Apple/Google destined to become ‘frienemies’ ala Apple/Microsoft (circa 1990), and if so, when?”

Last week the first “WHEN” moment took form as a Google executive went on record asserting that Android, Google’s smart phone initiative, would outsell the iPhone.

I said it then, and I will repeat it now.  This is a major storyline to watch.

Related Links:

  1. Holy Shit! Apple's Halo Effect: how and why gravity has become Apple's friend.
  2. iPhone SDK - Mobile reasons for optimism: why the iPhone Universe is a big deal.
  3. Googling Innovation: how Google seeds new ideas, selects the ones that sprouts and amplifies them to success.
  4. iPod touch, the first mainstream Wi-Fi platform: why it's important not to lose sight of the iPod touch side of the iPhone Universe.

 

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