Happy 4th Birthday iPhone

Wow, what a slow news week (month?), or maybe I’m just jaded beyond belief at what qualifies as interesting anymore. Might be the latter. I skim hundreds of posts most days, some days thousands, e.g. if I’ve been away or after a busy few days of development work, and lately, 99% of what I see… Read More

On Firefox Update Policy and Enterprises

Ars has a long, but definitely worthwhile read addressing the recent kerfuffle about Mozilla’s new Firefox product lifecycle and enterprise readiness. Firefox update policy: the enterprise is wrong, not Mozilla For its part, Mozilla seems committed to matching the pace of innovation set by Google Chrome, even at the risk of angering its enterprise deployments.… Read More

Fun with the OOW Mix Session Voting Data

Rich (@rmanalan) pointed me to this interesting walk through of the Mix (@oraclemix) Suggest-a-Session voting for this year’s OpenWorld. Data Science Fun with the OOW Mix Session Voting Data | Structured Data Greg Rahn (@gregrahn) does a nice job visualizing the data and pointing out some anomalies and the importance of having a social network to mobilize… Read More

Operator Error vs. System Failure

This bit of observation put me in mind of the toughest challenge we face as software developers, i.e. how to convey failure. Toddlers get difference between faulty hardware, operator error Development focuses on how software works, not on how it doesn’t work. Therefore, error handling and messaging never get the attention they require. Add to… Read More

Apps Don’t Matter, Seriously

Today, Robert Scoble (@scobleizer), one of the big proponents for apps mattering, responded to DHH’s (@DHH) assertion that core experience, not ancillary apps, matters most. Scoble’s main point is that people don’t want to look stupid so they buy the phone with the most “app potential” even if they don’t use these apps themselves. This… Read More

Apps Don’t Matter

Jason Grigsby (@grigs) put this seed in my head a couple weeks ago, and this post by DHH (@DHH) sums up the same essential point quite nicely, i.e. apps don’t matter. Ten apps is all I need – (37signals) Many pundits and bloggers like to point to apps as the main difference between iOS and… Read More

Epic: Pinstriping Done by Hand

Check out this dude and his epic pinstriping. I’ve seen pinstriping done by hand on stationary objects, which prevents this technique, i.e. moving the object, not the hand, and it’s equally epic. The hand and pressure control required to do good pinstriping is insane. Peep the Technique: Pinstriping Done by Hand – Core77

Very Cool, Deep Shot

Check out this MIT research project that transfers information between phone and laptop via the phone’s camera. MIT, Google Researchers Tap Cellphone Cameras To Grab Data From a PC – Ina Fried – Mobile – AllThingsD Similar in theory to the Chrome extension Chrome to Phone, this class of interactivity between devices is super useful… Read More

Windows Phone 7 Boycotts?

Since its debut last year, I’ve watched Windows Phone 7 with some interest. Similar to IE 9, IE 10 and the preview of Windows 8, WP7 surprisingly doesn’t suck, and as a long Microsoft-hater, I’ve been curious to see how they evolve. After the Nokia news, WP7 seemed poised to make a serious dent in… Read More

Do You Learn on Your Own?

At different points in my post-college life, I’ve carved out time to learn new technical skills, with mixed results. In addition to a general thirst to expand my skillset, ever since the dot-com Bubble burst, the importance of both breadth and depth of skills has driven me to scrape a few hours out of my… Read More

Another Nugget, iTunes Match

Another interesting bit of news coming out of WWDC was iTunes Match, the famous “one last thing” Steve Jobs dropped at the end of his keynote. Most of the coverage centers around creating amnesty for pirated music or monetizing it, depending on the perspective, all for $24.99 a year. Why Copyright Holders Love iTunes Match… Read More

OpenWorld Suggest-a-Session Begins

Looks like our friends over in Marketing, Marius (@radu43) and Tim (@planspark) are running Suggest-a-Session for OpenWorld (@oracleopenworld) again on Oracle Mix (@oraclemix) this year. On Friday, I found out Rich’s (@rmanalan) session proposal, “Building Mobile Apps with Oracle” was not accepted. Rich immediately added its abstract to Suggest-a-Session, and I tweeted a call to… Read More

Square as a Trojan Horse

This is worth a read if you’re interested in the recent, rapid innovation in credit card purchasing. @chexton » Blog Archive » Why Square could be one of the greatest Trojan Horses in recent tech history My short-sighted question about the seemingly competing innovations of Square and NFC are succinctly addressed thusly: Firstly, although Square currently relies on… Read More

Are You Always/Never Available?

IM has been a fixture in the home and in enterprises for well over a decade. One of the nice, possibly underhyped, features of IM is presence, i.e. letting your contacts know when you’re free to chat and when you’re busy. I suppose invisible is also a presence state, but from the would-be chatter’s perspective,… Read More

MicroPointing’s Miniature Mouse

Lately, there’s been a flood of interesting concepts, from touchless control, to gesture control, to foldable displays. Now, check out the micropointer. Interface Design: Ring-Based Controls – Core77 I love the video production. It feels like it’s been lifted directly from Robocop or Demolition Man, very “vision of the future”. I kept expecting Cyberdyne Systems or Omni Consumer… Read More