Drew Farkas’s Techdirt Profile

excelcior

About Drew Farkas

Christian, husband, owner of a small computer repair shop, web designer, artist, and volunteer. That pretty much sums it up.
Seriously, though, if you want to see what I'm all about, visit http://www.pricelessworksofjunk.com/
For my business site, drop by http://www.classymouse.com/
Cher-ah!



Drew Farkas’s Comments comment rss

  • Apr 19th, 2012 @ 8:17am

    Off-topic...

    Okay, I know this is off-topic, but I totally did a double-take when I read this headline. My name is Drew Farkas.

  • Jan 10th, 2012 @ 9:41am

    (untitled comment)

    The thing I thought was the funniest is that it said "American Innovation is lost", and showed an Incandescent light bulb going out. Smugglers & counterfeiters didn't do that, nor did patent infringers. The US Congress did that.
    Oh, and now that they've closed down every single US-based incandescent light bulb factory, now they've changed their minds and made them legal again.
    Sorry, off-topic, I know, but it still bugged me =-P

  • Nov 1st, 2011 @ 10:44pm

    Solar Airship/plane hybrid

    This post reminded of something I saw recently that intrigued me. Plus it's in the final stages of development.
    http://green.autoblog.com/2011/10/22/solar-ship-sails-the-skies-schlepps-supplies/

  • Oct 3rd, 2011 @ 7:13am

    The part that really suprised me...

    The thing I don't get is that Two Billion isn't enough. It's a company that employs 300 people. It's not Wal-Mart. It can't possibly have very much 'inventory overhead'. How can it *possibly* be worth $2,000,000,000.00 without any contracts going forward?

  • Aug 4th, 2011 @ 9:21pm

    Small world...

    I used to be a Skybeam customer, when I lived in Cheyenne, WY. Great company to deal with, and it's good to see they stand up for their customers. I just wish they offered service where I live now!

  • Jul 18th, 2011 @ 10:01pm

    Re: Facebook to be come the game platform...for now

    hmm you're forgetting the 4th group... the ones waiting for an open platform for social networking that isn't vendor-specific (think IRC). I don't use any social networks, and won't until that time comes.

  • Jun 28th, 2011 @ 9:25pm

    what killed My__

    Myspace was a great idea. However, like so many things, the media decided it would make great fodder for a sensationalized scare-campaign (think swine flu, bird flu, West Nile Virus, teen killed because she 'met a guy from the internet', etc). Every time something bad happened and could be linked back to My__, the news ran with it. Before too long, schools were recommending strongly that parents keep their kids off of it, and some even expelled kids who held My__ accounts. The website didn't have long left after that. Facebook was the same thing (except with less customizability, and way more creepy-stalker-features, and it simply rose up to fill the gap as the 'safe alternative', since it didn't facilitate meeting people you don't already know in real life.
    Personally I hate Faceblah with a passion, but it has become the de facto social networking interface. My wish is that some day social networking would be done across a platform that any company could tap into -- My__ profiles could 'friend' Facebook profiles, which could share pictures with people on Friendster, etc. Kinda like IRC. Then this whole issue would go away. If you wanted to draw people to your service, you'd have to offer better service, and if your friends wanted something lamer, that's fine, you could still use the service of your choice.
    But I digress.

  • Feb 22nd, 2010 @ 5:37pm

    Comment #30...

    I know I'm just adding to the noise at this point, but my humble opinion (as a fundamentalist Christian who hates Internet whitelists), is that if there were a .kids TLD, it would be about 5% beneficial (as in, I seriously do not see much benefit at all, as censoring is always errant and flawed, and restricting a child's use to only .kids sites would be too restrictive to be worthwhile), but I find .xxx to be a terrific idea. Of course it wouldn't be practical to claim that all the porn in the world is locked behind that TLD -- but if just 5% was, you could quickly and easily block a computer from that 5% without any risk of loosing anything that's actually worth keeping. And without a single whitelist.
    ~just my $.02

  • Aug 25th, 2009 @ 3:13pm

    Dr. Who?

    And here I was expecting to see an article about the BBC chasing after fans of Doctor Who...

  • Aug 12th, 2009 @ 8:42pm

    same old whiners...

    It really gets me, the way people insist that everything under the sun has to have a specific, profitable dollar value. If you want to talk about business models, just look at HP inkjet printers. Huge business, worldwide market domination, yet they sell most of their printers for less than cost. I kid you not. Furthermore, the retailer turns around and resells it for even less than HP sold it to them for.* In effect, both the producer and the retailer are giving away the merchandise. Why? Because they have found a way to make an alternate business plan work. Would anyone question Office Depot's printer & accessory sales? How about the largest computer & printer manufacturer? Are they 'throwing money out the window'? Fact is, they've found a way to make it work -- and I earnestly believe that any business can.
    Take another example: Techdirt. Granted, I'm not personally familiar with Masnick's take home pay -- but this web site surely is not a nonprofit hobby. I personally read this blog on a daily basis. I don't pay a dime to do so. Yet, somehow, there's always enough for me to read, and the quality hasn't dropped. According to the doomsayers, either the blog will soon shut down, the quality of the posts will drop, or I'll start being forced to pay each time I read it. Let's see if they're right.
    (the last 11 years would tend to make me think they're not...)

    *I used to be a manager for Office Depot. I saw many printers sell for less than the wholesale price -- especially inkjet fax machines. They were typically $20-30 less than wholesale.
    These are just two examples of this; I could go on. (Gas Stations, Sony Playstation,....)