10 Days!

It's been 10 days since I posted. Last weekend was fall break so me and my roommate, Adam, drove up to Boston for the weekend. Boston is a pain to navigate, and the recently released Google Maps for Palm OS was a real time saver — when I got cell phone service. It's astonishing how such Cingular doesn't provide adequate service in such a large metropolitan area. I get great service anywhere else I've been but Boston seems to be a black hole of Cingular coverage.

A bunch of things just bunched up on this short week, including a reaction paper to Fred Brooks' The Mythical Man-Month (which coincided almost perfectly with 37signals' release of a free online version of their software development book, Getting Real). and a bunch of group meetings. I've been re-inspired by Marc Canter's post on "the amount of automation, modernization and catch-up that the health and medical professions require," as it relates to one of my group projects related to his conclusion (which I won't disclose publicly in case we decide to take it further than just a pedagogical exercise).

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ENGL 105: Copyright and Culture

The class I am currently sitting in has a list of recommended blogs on the syllabus. We just watched a video podcast. Cool!

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Digg 3 vs Netscape Beta

Digg 3.0 was released to the world today with a bunch of new features detailed all over the 'Net, the most important of which are the five new categories now featured. They are tagged "beta", as is par for the course, and encompass Science, World & Business, Videos, Entertainment and Gaming. Note that you must be a registered member in order to try out the new categories. The tag cloud is also a new feature that weighs stories based on their popularity. I haven't spent much time in either Digg v2 or Digg v3, so I'll the real in-depth reviews to those more qualified.

What's more interesting is the war being waged between Digg and the new Netscape home page. Kevin Rose fired the first shot by saying that Netscape should have waited until this week to copy Digg's features and now Jason Calcanis fires back about the number of ads on the new version of Digg. My first visit to Netscape's site (just a few minutes ago) greeted me with the (non-anchored) headline, "Digg 3.0 Disappoints". My only hope is that the two communities not use the sites as the battleground and stick to the sites' real purpose.

Digg has first-mover advantage but Netscape has AOL's relatively infinite purse to back it up if times get rough. Like I said, I'm not invested enough in Digg and the two sites are similar enough that I don't really care which way it goes. In the end, it's the users who benefit. Competition is always healthy.

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Happy Birthday, Mac OS X

Mac OS X turns five today. John Siracusa of Ars Technica has an article chronicling its history.

For me at least, the success of OS X is due to the "How did I live without this?" feeling I get every time a new OS upgrade comes out. I'm not talking about just features wise, because who knows the last time I used the Dashboard or Smart Folders was, but also performance-wise and UI refinement (pinstripes anyone?). Siracusa sums it up nicely:

A side-by-side test-drive of Mac OS X 10.0 and 10.4 is shocking. The eternal debate is whether this gap exists because 10.4 is so good, or because 10.0 was so, so bad.

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Intel Mac mini Unimpressive

Apple's new Mac mini, with Intel Core processors, were announced today. Specs are here.

The specs are decent and fit in-line (enough below) the iMac and MacBook Pro but it is way overpriced. Gone is the magical $499/$599 price tag of the PowerPC mini, replaced with $599/$799 price points. I specced a mini as close to the $1299 iMac as possible (2×1.66 vs 2×1.83, 120GB vs 160GB, Intel GMA950 vs ATI X1600 128MB) and I'm at $1151 after adding the iSight. That leaves $150 to find a 17" display capable of displaying at least 1400×900. I don't really think this is possible and that makes the Mac mini overpriced or the iMac a great deal.

Now, the mini may not be such a great deal when compared to the iMac, but it would be fair to wait and see what Dell et al have to offer. Considering that the megahertz myth is alive and well in most consumer's minds, I wouldn't be surprised if they don't offer any desktops with the Core processors, which may be faster than P4s but at slower clock speeds.

Don't even get me started on the iPod Hi-Fi, which at $350 is more expensive than all but one version of the iPod. It may look pretty, but my Klipsch THX 2.1 are great speakers (some of the best 2.1 available) that I picked up for less than half the price of Hi-Fi.

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Naked Conversations

The other day I sent an e-mail off to Adam Curry about the Google Maps of aviation charts and he read my email on DSC 316! Man, was I excited when I heard him mention my email. Later on in the show, he talked about how podcasting is opening the channels of communication between podcasters/artists and their listeners and I'm thrilled to have just experienced that first-hand.

Today, I happened to pick up Robert Scoble and Shel Israel's new book, Naked Conversations and even though I've only read the first chapter already, I'm already excited about reading the rest of it. The first chapter details the story of how blogging got started at Microsoft and how it has helped Microsoft turn its public image around.

An interesting little anecdote mentioned is how they came up with the name Channel 9:

The name is derived from the United Airlines (UA) open audio channel, on which passengers can listen to pilots during take-offs, flights and landing.

It was this channel 9 that helped Lenn Pryor, former tech evangelist of Microsoft, overcome his fear of flying. In the same sense, Microsoft hopes to make people less afraid (or less hostile?) towards them by letting customers "listen in" on the company.

After spending all of last week attending presentations for internships in the financial services industry, these two events brought me real voices from inside companies after having to deal with all the garbage "corpspeak" that comes with those corporate presentations. A bit disturbing was that a quick search last week (which was by no means extensive) didn't produce any results for bloggers who work in financial services. Is the industry that competitive that no one is willing to give up any information that would take away their edge over their co-workers? Or am I just being antagonistic and the real reason is that blogging doesn't really have a place in B2B businesses?

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UI Revolutions

Between Microsoft's new Office UI (screenshots, video) featuring the ribbon, and Nintendo's unorthodox Revolution controller (details, hands-on), I think we're at the start of a new era of User Interface/User Experience design.

Universal designs, while consistent, may overly complicate the performance of a particular action; they are the jacks of all trades and kings of none. Microsoft is now moving away from a UI paradigm that worked well with few features but requires a lot of menu-hunting by the user to find what they want to do. Instead of forcing the user to think on the document-level, which requires thinking about formatting, layout, tables, etc., Microsoft decided to orient the user on the task-level. The creation of a document can be broken down into many tasks, the majority of which can't be done simultaneously, so why not focus the UI on document tasks instead of documents? That's exactly what Microsoft did. At first glance, it looks like they moved the menu bars into larger tabs with much larger toolbars. The biggest difference, however, is that the tabs make the toolbar modal and in doing so, eliminates options that are only applicable in a different context. Not only that, the ribbon provides more vertical space and can fit descriptions in addition to icons and allows for different layouts of icons within the ribbon.

Moral of the story: Empower the user by providing only options related to the task they are performing.

Only with an intuitive, contextual User Interface, can you not only provide access to popular options, but also highlight previously obscured options than can also be powerful.

Nintendo has taken a similar approach. They have created a non-standard controller design that will simplify the performance of particular actions. Contrary to Nintendo's competitor's "universal controller" design, which don't adjust to context, the Revolution controller can be physically used in ways that mimic in-game physical movement. Nintendo is in no way restricted by pseudo-consistency. Their developers don't have to deal with: "Since A is the main action button in our menu system, we don't want to confuse our users by making another the button the main action button in gameplay." Not only that, but users have no reason to associate "A" with action X other than previous experience in that game.

Things gets even more complicated when you need key combinations to perform actions because there aren't enough buttons on the controller. With Madden 2006 (on XBox), for example, I need to press three buttons to call a Hot Route (where a receiver's path is changed after the play is called): First there's "Y" to turn on the Hot Route (how does Y equate to Hot Route?), then I pick a reciever's letter and finally use the control stick to pick from one of four pre-selected routes. There is nothing intuitive about this, but it's the only way to do it with the current controller paradigm. Now image the same situation with the Revolution controller: Point the controller at the receiver (intuitive!), press a button (is Hot Route the main action of the current context? No, so then I must have to push an auxillary button), draw with or physically move the controller in the shape you want to receiver to run his route (intuitive!).

Moral of the story: By taking away the traditional restrictions of a controller, you allow for more contextual control of a game situation. The ability to add peripherals (such as a a left-handed analog stick) allows for even more contextualization.

Only with an intuitive, contextual User Interface, can you not only provide access to popular options, but also highlight previously obscured options than can also be powerful.

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