Month: November 2014

Eurotechnopanic

I wrote a 3000-word essay about Eurotechnopanic — or, Google and the German Problem — that just appeared on Zeit Online. A small backstory:

Zeit is my favorite German publication by far. But I did first approach the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung with this piece because the paper has been at the forefront of Germany’s antitechnology movement and I thought they would welcome discussion … and also because the FAZ had published an 8000-word attack on me and I figured 3000 words was a downpayment on equal time. But the FAZ refused to publish it.

So I went to my favorite newspaper, Die Zeit, and its online editor-in-chief, Jochen Wegner, agreed immediately to publish it. I’m honored to be there. These are important issues in Europe that require more balanced discussion.

Here is the start of the essay in English:

I worry about Germany and technology. I fear that protectionism from institutions that have been threatened by the internet — mainly media giants and government — and the perception of a rising tide of technopanic in the culture will lead to bad law, unnecessary regulation, dangerous precedents, and a hostile environment that will make technologists, investors, and partners wary of investing and working in Germany.

I worry, too, about Europe and technology. Germany’s antiprogress movement is spreading to the EU — see its court’s decision creating a so-called right to be forgotten — as well as to members of the EU — see Spain’s link tax.

I worry mostly about damage to the internet, its freedoms and its future, limiting the opportunities an open net presents to anyone anywhere. 3 forces are at work endangering the net: control, protectionism, and technopanic.

Foreign pageant queens

I was hired to cruise around in a fake gold Mercedes golf cart with 5 other girls for 3 days, to lure investors for a miniature replica of Versailles. Pageants serve as infomercials: “Visit Ordos, or Dunhuang, or Dalian, or Chengdu: wealthy enough to import foreign pageant queens!”

in a fully globalized economy, you are now exotic.

The Substance of Style

this was one of my favorite books in the last 5 years, and it has aged pretty well. as more of our world is eaten by software, it will become both easier and more impactful to have good design.

From airport terminals decorated like Starbucks to the popularity of hair dye among teenage boys, one thing is clear: we have entered the Age of Aesthetics. Sensory appeals are everywhere, and they are intensifying, radically changing how Americans live and work.

We expect every strip mall and city block to offer designer coffee, a copy shop with do-it-yourself graphics workstations, and a nail salon for manicures on demand. Every startup, product, or public space calls for an aesthetic touch, which gives us more choices, and more responsibility. By now, we all rely on style to express identity. And aesthetics has become too important to be left to the aesthetes.

Tmobile pivots from bloatware

the skeptic in me sees tmobile’s zany moves as born out of desperation.

No Corporate Logo, No Bloatware, no crap you don’t want on the #Nexus6 from T-Mobile​:

That’s Un-carrier – listening to our customers and giving them what they want, not sticking a stupid corporate logo and a bunch of crap software I know you guys don’t want on your #Nexus device.

We know you guys buy a #Nexus6 to avoid that kind of thing!

Google did want to highlight the Virtual Preload (VPL) capabilities on Lollipop, so we made MyAccount available if you want it… But you can totally delete it. That’s what we do.

Hope you like what we’ve chosen to do there (or more importantly, what we’ve chosen not to do).

Des Smith, Sr. Product Manager, T-Mobile US and business owner of Nexus 6 and Nexus 9.