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Happy Monday!

This is Jimmy’s Daily Planet’s 500th Blog Post!

It’s truly surreal to try to fathom this milestone. I cannot even imagine what the future holds or what #1,000 might be about or look like, let alone #501.

Pardon me, I need just a quick minute…

Before watching Interstellar for the second time yesterday (I highly recommend this movie!), a cornucopia of trailers blazed across the perfectly expansive IMAX screen, as well as our our five senses, to ensure at least one return visit to the cinema within the next several months. Yes, several months, including May 2015. Excluding the film about this group of avengers, one of the films that caught everyone’s attention was, Chappie, which tells the evolutionary story of how a robot seemingly built with scrap parts begins to (supposedly) feel emotions like humans.

Luckily, there are no frightening scenarios or consequences of machines with highly-advanced technology and a pulse entering society, right?

The presumed moral of the story and predictive nature of our future aside, the music used in the trailer sounds like something out of the future…and, fortunately, it sounds quite nice.

Build Yourself a Great Week!

The Kick Seen (and Analyzed) Around the World

With an added chill in the air (in Ohio, anyways), the phrase “it’s football season” takes on multiple meanings. This sentiment applies to both American and European/global football (soccer). By accident, while perusing the Apple store website, a familiar circular object appeared before my surprised eyes. Intrigued, I clicked on the picture to learn more. Despite a shocking price tag ($299.95), this technology is sure to gain serious intrigue by those at elite clubs with world-class skill.

In the purest sense, Adidas has given the world the next-generation soccer ball:

The beautiful game may now require tech support…

Apple: The Next Generation

iPhone 6

iPhone 6 Plus

Apple Pay

Apple Watch

Ladies and gentlemen, for the first time in what has felt like an eternity, Apple Inc. has begun to recapture some of the magic surrounding its innovative products since the tragic passing of its iconic and visionary co-founder Steve Jobs three years ago. Is Apple officially back? Well, no, because you can’t bring Steve Jobs back. However, the next generation of Apple Inc. (see what I did there) appears to be presenting its latest gadgets for us to awe at with great joy today from the Flint Center in Cupertino, California.

The new products, plus a free album from U2, and it’s safe to conclude this was a truly amazing iAmazing day for Apple.

Two quick observations: In an effort to progress beyond the solitary charisma of the late Steve Jobs and his excellent presenting skills, Apple Inc. has appeared to have assigned divisional heads to explain each of its major product reveals. Part of the next generation leadership of the company I’m hypothesizing. And that the iPhone 6 Plus is getting closer to the size of the Zack Morris brick phone. Just something to contemplate…

To think (again, see what I did there), this iPhone craze all started with an announcement seven years ago…

Beyond the “fresh out of the box” experience, will these products sell? Will they frame and become the future of personal technology?

While these answers are unknown, I think the world is ready to take a fresh, delicious bite out of Apple today.

Silence is Not Golden

Technology has its upsides. There’s no doubt about that. In fact, the existence of technology is based on the premise of making things easier (well, depends on who you ask). Still early into the relentlessly innovative 21st century, people from all around the world continue to have a front row seat to the show of crazy ideas coming to surprising fruition. Seeing and, in some instances, using these inventions is incredible. Whether it’s a fully electric car, a future commercial flight to space or a smartphone that operates as a handheld computer, nothing seems off limits. The latter is the most fascinating at this point because of how it defines the days, hours, minutes and seconds of our lives. Checking email, text messages, the Internet, pictures, videos, social media, countless apps (informative and silly) and a bevy of other distractions take us away from what’s occurring right in front of us. On too many occasions, we (myself included) have our heads angled downward.

Unfortunately, this is not the only thing on the downward trend.

When convenience consumes too much of our reality, the responsibility for personal interaction declines at an equal (and frustrating) rate. One shouldn’t rely on the easy disappearance and avoidance of providing answers to a variety of questions behind our battery-charged electronic devices. Silence is the easy non-response, but it also is what’s found in the gutter of social interaction today. Even if the answer to a question is not good news, at least there is some degree of closure. This type of finality can at least allow someone to know the truth and move on with their day (and lives in some cases). But with our “smartphones” and its instant access and responsiveness, as well as its prolonged avoidance capabilities, communication is too often a fractured practice nowadays.

So many aspects of modern life have been made easier than decades earlier with the breakthrough of various technologies. However, maybe there’s a problem here. Is it possible that these new social norms/”shortcuts” have stripped away the necessary completeness when it comes to personal interaction and communication?

All I can say is I was supposed to go to a Goo Goo Dolls concert with a girl I’ve been dating for 3 months last night and I was blown off without a single text, phone call or hint of a notice.

That silence produced more heartache than one of the band’s classic hits.

Maybe we don’t need smartphones…maybe we need better phones with a built-in app called common courtesy.