July 14, 2008
Back in March I was ready for a new computer. The
decision of what to purchase was purely mine, as I run a consulting
firm and select and fund nearly all my own equipment. After some months
of hemming and hawing and discussing it with tech and non-tech friends,
I bought a MacBook. I didn't think this was a momentous decision. I'd
worked with plenty of colleagues who were on Macs and except for an
occasional "slip" in the flow of word processing documents, I never
gave it a second thought that their operating system was different from
mine. That gave me the confidence that I could do all that I needed to
do with this new hardware and operating system.
What I've realized three months on is that a huge percentage of what I
do is in the cloud. Cloud computing refers to services and storage
provided for fee or free by third parties via the Internet. (InformationWeek
offers a good primer.)
So, as long as there's a Mac way to tap into the cloud (which for me is
nearly always via a browser), I'm covered.

I suspect much of what I do is what you do, just in different
proportions. When I think through how I spend my time (for all my
clients, including Directions Media and Penn State University among
others), it breaks down something like this:
- write/edit articles in word processor (part cloud) - 20%
- search/read news/blogs in browser (cloud) - 30%
- write blog (cloud) - 10%
- communicate via e-mail/Web comments/IM/phone (part cloud) - 15%
- create/edit audio/video/graphics (part cloud) - 10%
- manage publication (cloud) - 5%
- use desktop GIS (Windows required) - 10%
- Writely (Google Apps)
- Various Web search tools (mostly Google)
- Serendipity (open source blogging platform, hosted by Directions Media)
- Angel (Penn State's course management system)
- Drupal (open source content management system [CMS] used Penn State World Campus GIS program)
- Yahoo Messenger
- GMail
- Jing
- Directions Media custom-built CMS (MySQL core)
What about "adjusting" to the Mac? Was it hard? No. It took just about a week to find/buy/download/install all the needed software. I bought just one package: Apple's iWork, a suite to provide all the "office" apps I'd need. To date, recipients note a perfect record in reading documents I've exported out to Word, Excel and other formats. The only glitch so far? Working out the kinks when I convert a presentation to PowerPoint; sometimes the images disappear! Everything else has been "easy peasy." I was happy to find that our preferred audio editor, open source Audacity, has an install for the Mac, as do Yahoo Messenger and Jing (I wrote about this image/video capture tool last year). I could not find my favorite FTP program and switched to Cyberduck, nor my preferred HTML editor, which I've replaced with Taco. Oh, and I dropped my anti-virus software, as most agree it's not needed for MacOS.
What's the single best thing about my new machine? Instant on. A very quick boot and almost no time to wake from sleep continue to make me smile three month later.
What's the real revelation here? It's not really news, though I was sort of surprised to hear tech journalist Leo Laporte state it, perhaps for the umpteenth time, on TWIT (This Week in Tech, a podcast) this week. "The Internet is the next killer app." It certainly is for me.
What this all means, I think, is that, save those who "do" desktop GIS 40 hours per week, most of us in the geocommunity will be living in the cloud more and more in the coming months and years. And what of those "desktop GISers"? Are their ranks growing? I suspect their numbers are going down, as more power, more data and more tools appear in the cloud and thus on tablets, ultraportables, phones and Macs.
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| It appears that you and I have been traveling along very similar technology soul-searching paths lately. But having your desktop GIS on your "second machine" is a revolutionary concept! :) Quite appealing, too. Have you considered Open Office (which I use for Windows, and I imagine will use on my yet-to-be-acquired Mac)? Also, FireFTP -- a Firefox plugin, surely available for the Mac. Very coincidentally, Joh Reiser, a commenter on my blog, shares his GIS/Mac/cloud experiences here: http://blog.entchev.com/2008/07/15/gis-for-mac-redux.aspx#Comment |
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| Adena, why not use Parallels, VMWare, etc. on your Mac to run your GIS software and other Windows only apps? Friends of mine run ArcGIS very successfully this way. HTH, Karl |
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| A few more Apple related discussions popped up this week: Ogle Earth: Three ways to make your Mac more location-savvy http://www.ogleearth.com/2008/07/three_ways_to_m.html Atanas Entchev on GIS for the Mac Redux: http://blog.entchev.com/2008/07/15/gis-for-mac-redux.aspx Some twitter comments, I think related to this editorial, challenged: "not sure how anybody enmeshed in the GIS field can migrate successfully to a mac..." and "I just don't see a lot of complex GIS analysis being done through mac - most of the macs I've seen in GIS shops are for map prod" As for the comments to run GIS via a virtual machine, I certainly could. However, I don't think that would serve my students well; they are per university policy to be on Windows XP natively. And, tackling OS issues (we've had them) means I need to be on the same platform. Finally, I got a kick yesterday when recording the podcast with Don Murray at Safe and Paul Bissett at WeoGeo (http://www.directionsmag.com/article.php?article_id=2819): they are Mac/cloud people too. |
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