Category Archives: Security

Porsche Diesel Lays Waste to Competitors

Wow, I love the Porsche Cayenne Diesel review on Edmunds: 2010 Porsche Cayenne Diesel 3.0 TDI First Drive on Inside Line

Farmers and horse owners and truckers already get this, but someday it will be possible to say the word “torque” and not hear crickets chirp in a crowded room of everyday people. Regarding the vast majority of passenger vehicles, torque is the king in how you accelerate, haul, or even lay waste to competitors.

That paragraph is buried down below several other excellent comments.

Here is the meat of the argument for diesel:

…it emits 21 percent less CO2 than the Cayenne’s 3.6-liter gasoline V6 and improves mpg by 39 percent. The Cayenne diesel jumps to 100 km/h (62 mph) from a standstill in just 8.3 seconds, only 0.2 second slower than the gas V6, and this is mainly due to the diesel’s added 154 pounds at the curb (4,939 pounds in total).

You just can’t argue with those numbers. Same performance yet far cleaner output as well as 40% better efficiency! How can this be true? And this is not sold in America because…?

Here is the three-part explanation and analysis for why the engine, although already a match for gasoline performance, is actually in a “tuned-down” configuration:

We asked Klaus-Gerhard Wolpert, Porsche’s man in charge of SUVs, why exactly didn’t Porsche at least goose the output of this engine above its rating of 236 hp and 405 pound-feet of torque just to set it apart from the same engine in the Audi Q7 and VW Toureg. After all, it’s a Porsche.

“You know,” Wolpert said, grinning, “that’s the sort of question my boss [CEO Wendelin Wiedeking] sometimes asks me as well. The challenge is that to add that little burst of power or torque would have first threatened our CO2 rating of 244 grams per kilometer, taking us over the magic 250 level.” (Below 250 grams apparently results in a marked tax and insurance advantage in several countries.)

“Then there’s the sheer cost of the investment to make such changes to existing powertrains,” he adds. “That would have seriously damaged the business case.”

Besides these practical matters, we also got a few Porsche leaders to admit that there could have been certain political risks should Porsche assert its growing powers within the VW Group by demanding the same powertrain as in the VW and Audi but with more of everything.

This is all about risk management. Better efficiency for compliance is nice to see. A better answer would be that they could get more torque without threatening the 250 barrier, but alas they could not and so chose to keep things clean. More standardized parts makes repair and maintenance more likely and less risky, with a lowered cost of ownership. Also nice to see, although it threatens the exclusivity that some might say defines an exotic. The decision to keep it close to a VW and Audi actually probably led to much disappointment among buyers. My bet is Porsche will up the ante this year and next to differentiate, especially after Cargraphic Porsche announced a tuner kit with 215KW(292PS) and 644Nm of torque, giving 0 to 100 km/h in 7.74 seconds (1.27 seconds faster than gasoline). Lumma Design have a similar offering, with exterior modifications to match.

Alas, the Edmunds’ article was written in 2009 and like most at that time it wondered when (not if) this vehicle would arrive in the US. Even the Wall Street Journal has predicted since 2008 that a dozen new high-efficiency diesel vehicles would be introduced to America by now; including the “superclean” Honda four-cylinder 2.2 i-CTDi engine that set world records.

Unfortunately, however, most of the advanced diesel technology is yet to be incorporated into passenger cars here or imported. Auto manufacturers still operate under the mistaken notion that there is no market. Without Dave Hermance, the late Executive Engineer for Environmental Engineering at Toyota, there would never have been a hybrid in today’s market. Who will be the Dave Hermance of diesel?

Application Logging Wish List

Michael Janke has posted a nice list of “a few semi-random thoughts on application logging”

Machine parseable (yet human readable) format
Single line events
Date/Time stamp
Rational message prioritization
Unique identifiers
Sufficient information to link the logs
Logging of failures
Timeliness
Serialized numbering on log messages

A few things caught my eye (like information disclosure, logs on a compromised system do not have to be presumed tainted, and logging successes is just skipped over) but overall a good read.

iPhone losing OS fight

Regular readers of this blog may remember when I raged about the “statistical mess” reported in the news when it comes to which mobile phone is “winning”. That was a couple months ago (or six decades in mobile years).

Reuters, for example, headlines with “Google’s Android takes lead in US consumer smartphones: Android devices had 33 pct share in Q2”. Open the article, however, and you you see that they compare Android to RIM. That is like comparing Linux to Apple Laptop sales. One is an operating system, the other is hardware with an operating system.

This time I went straight to the source and found Nielson is actually reporting three phone OS trends. No hardware and software mixing and such, thank you very much.

The chart makes it tempting to call RIM the biggest OS loser, but in fact it starts the year two points ahead of Apple’s OS and then ends the year…wait a minute! Does that chart say 25% is higher than 26%? WTF?

I swear I did not edit that image. Nielsen currently tells the public that the Apple’s iPhone OS or iOS (they seem to make it interchangeable) has leaped ahead of RIM’s OS with 25 points, while of RIM’s OS trails behind at a sad 26 points.

A mistake, surely. The Nielsen blog text gives another view:

…Blackberry RIM and Apple iOS are in a statistical dead heat for second place among recent acquirers

The next graph shows Google’s Android OS gaining ten points in just six months while RIM’s OS lost five and Apple’s iOS lost one.

Android is now only ten points behind iOS. Can they keep up the pace and pass iOS in the next six months? Looks clear to me that Google will rocket past Apple:

Will people dump Apple’s iOS because of hardware lock and privacy concerns only to find Google’s Android OS is playing from the same deck of cards? These are questions I wish Nielsen had tried to answer.

I also wish they had mentioned the Symbian OS. Nielsen omits its trends entirely, which gives me the impression the data has serious geographical bias — Apple-merica. The iOS and Android, in other words, would be lower, maybe significantly lower, than BlackBerry OS and Symbian if this were a global test.

The BBC chart I mentioned before was confusing, but it still paints a more complete picture than Nielsen.

What is the value of online privacy

Many people worry about what companies will do with all the data they are collecting on web behavior. Virtually every major website is keeping tabs your behavior through a variety of tags and various web analytics and tracking technology. Most are just tracking your actions on their site, but more and more companies are coming up with new innovative ways to track your behavior as you cross web domains, principally through the use of tracking cookies.

A recent Wall Street Journal article examining the 50 most popular US websites comments on the fact that many top internet firms aren’t even aware that 3rd party vendors are using their site to place such code on your computer. These 50 sites collectively placed over 3000 tracking files on a test computer with over 2/3rd of those files installed by 131 other companies “many of which are in the business of tracking Web users to create rich databases of consumer profiles that can be sold”.

Companies will claim that this monitoring is the price we pay for free services on the internet. Basic economics state this is not the case.

Companies have the ability to make a buck based on your work and are seizing it without even a thought towards compensating you for you data. Many don’t even ask for you permission and some have developed new flash-based cookies that redeploy themselves even after you have deleted them. At least supermarket, department and other big box stores have to ask, if you want to sign up for their “preferred customer tracking cards” and then use incentives to use them each time.

Since the data carries no value to a consumer, tremendous value to marketers and there is little harm in sharing, I say compensate consumers for their data. This practice is common place in surveys and study groups. All I’m saying is you should get your 1/10th of a penny.