What was that about not being evil?

Google is not and never will be a super villain. But it will shortly have its own space fleet.

It’s bought a firm called Skybox Imaging which is launching satellites in order to step up just how finely detailed a company can map the world or even see preposterous details. Skip straight to the excuse-me-what part of this news, as reported by Macrumours:

Skybox says they are already looking at Foxconn every week and are able to pinpoint the next iPhone release based on the density of trucks outside their manufacturing facilities.

So, seriously, Google will be able to see when trucks leave the iPhone factory. It takes quite a long time for Apple to get as many iPhones out as it needs for a launch, so the shipping must start – what, days? weeks? before the announcement. That means Samsung will have time to make and release another dozen phones while the trucks are en route.

The rest of the news is more straightforward, this time from Wall Street Journal:

By the time its entire fleet of 24 satellites has launched in 2018, Skybox will be imaging the entire Earth at a resolution sufficient to capture, for example, real-time video of cars driving down the highway. And it will be doing it three times a day.

Find the best online course in anything

I’ve long had a soft spot for Lynda.com and more recently have enjoyed watching some of Screencasts Online’s work. Plus if you’re a member of the Writers’ Guild, the NUJ, Equity or the Musicians’ Guild then you can get free online courses in a huge number of things from the FEU, The Federation of Entertainment Unions and its training site.

But there are more online courses in the world than you can shake your head at and Lifehacker has found a site that helps you find the best one for you.

Online classes are a great way to learn new skills. SlideRule makes your search easier by letting you browse and search through over 17,000 online courses.P

SlideRule’s reach is extensive and covers many popular education providers, like Codecademy, Khan Academy, Udemy, and MIT Open Courseware. You can browse by provider or through subjects like Computers & Technology, Business & Economics, and Law. SlideRule also has a review system so users can rate courses and help you avoid the ones that aren’t worth your time.

SlideRule Searches for the Best Online Courses in Any Category – Patrick Allan, Lifehacker (4 June 2014)

In my poking about it, I don’t think the reach is that great: there is a clear bias toward technology subjects. But then Screencasts Online has that too and Lynda.com includes a lot.

But I am keeping an eye on SlideRule; have a look yourself and see what you think.

Never mind the quality, concentrate on quantity

Seriously. This is really just a longer way of saying the maxim “don’t get it right, get it done” or how one shouldn’t be paralysed by the search for perfection. But it’s an interesting longer way:

The ceramics teacher announced on opening day that he was dividing the class into two groups. All those on the left side of the studio, he said, would be graded solely on the quantity of work they produced, all those on the right solely on its quality.

His procedure was simple: on the final day of class he would bring in his bathroom scales and weigh the work of the “quantity” group: fifty pound of pots rated an “A”, forty pounds a “B”, and so on. Those being graded on “quality”, however, needed to produce only one pot”albeit a perfect one”to get an “A”.

Well, came grading time and a curious fact emerged: the works of highest quality were all produced by the group being graded for quantity. It seems that while the “quantity” group was busily churning out piles of work”and learning from their mistakes”the “quality” group had sat theorizing about perfection, and in the end had little more to show for their efforts than grandiose theories and a pile of dead clay.

What 50 Pounds of Clay Can Teach You About Design – Chanpory Rith, Medium

I think the professor was a bit of a git, knowing that half the class would fail – and which half – yet cheerily lab-ratting them. But I am now very much of the opinion that getting a thing done is important: I find it immensely satisfying to think of something and then make it real.

I’d say, then, that I fully support this idea of saying nuts to perfection, let’s get on with it, except that I’m not. I read a book of flash fiction by an interesting guy who had spoken at an event about getting on with writing, about getting flash fiction done. His big point was that it’s easy and I’m afraid that the writer’s ease is not my concern. The final material is and though one can presume that he’s getting better each time he writes a flash fiction book, as a reader I just saw text that wasn’t very engaging. Great ideas, just not quite there somehow.

So there you are: please sort this out, quality vs quantity. Off you go, let me know how you get on.