Luscious Links and Things

I found out today that my old pal Noel (@noelportugal) started a blog, focused on Web of Things, erm things, called WOTLabs. One of his first posts is about the Nike+ Fuelband and how to use its API, whose documentation apparently isn’t complete just yet. Semi-related, can we standardize on what to call internet-connected objects?… Read More

Noel and the AT&T Developer Summit

Noel (@noelportugal) is a bit of a serial hackathon participant, and earlier this month, he attended the AT&T Developer Summit in Las Vegas. The event was actually several competitions, each with a different focus, and unsurprisingly, Noel joined the Arduino hackathon. While browsing MAKE yesterday, I found a full writeup on all the entries in that category,… Read More

Another Link Post

I can’t seem to find a topic worthy of more than a paragraph, so here’s another post of curated links. Could be worse. A P2P Wifi Tethering Market What you say? It’s exactly what it sounds like, a community of users allowing others to tether off their connections in exchange for credit to use when… Read More

Monday, More Links

I’ve been sick so, here comes another link post. Find the comments if you feel so inclined. Google, Redesigned The Verge has an interesting retrospective on how Google has been gradually redesigning its interfaces since Larry Page took over as CEO. This has been happening almost organically, and if I hadn’t bothered to stop and… Read More

Random Links on a Tuesday

Here comes one of those link posts, comprised of topics that are interesting to me, but not enough to write more than a few words. Facebook launches Graph Search Wired has the full story of how Graph Search came to be. I bemoaned Facebook’s lost search opportunity years ago, and apparently, I wasn’t alone, given… Read More

Firefox OS Emerges

Last week at CES, details of Firefox OS, Mozilla’s all-web, mobile OS, began to emerge, and wow has it come a long way since that early build of B2G that I fumbled with on the GSM Nexus S Rich (@rmanalan) sent me last year. I’ve had great hopes for Firefox OS, since it is built… Read More

Everyone Loves Easter Eggs

Over the years, I’ve put a fair amount of thought into the ways that game mechanics can improve software usability. I’m not alone, since now there’s, a name for this process, gamification. The biggest problem designers face when attempting to create engagement through game mechanics is “doing it right,” and since each system is different,… Read More

Some Topics for 2013

Hope you all enjoyed the holidays and closing out 2012. Continuing something I started doing last year, here are some topics I’ll be following with interest in 2013. You may notice some are repeats of last year, but that’s not to say any have dropped off my radar. I just felt like repeating them for… Read More

Friday Flotsam

Seems like Friday has become my day to clean up all the open browser tabs I accumulate during the week, add some context and content and, ideally, get your thoughts. Here we go. Mobile OS and the Back Feature The Back button originated in the browser, and it has migrated over to native apps in… Read More

Friday Bits and Bytes

Been a while, but frankly, I haven’t had much to say lately. So, I rolled a few updates into a single post. Enjoy. Urbanized Over the weekend, I watched “Urbanized,” the final installment in Gary Hutswit’s design trilogy. If you read here, you’ll recall that I thoroughly enjoyed the first two parts, “Objectified” about industrial… Read More

I Guess It’s Video Friday

It’s Friday, so why not share some video? Doesn’t really make sense to me either, but sometimes the words just won’t flow. Moving on, here are a couple interesting talks, one official TED, the other a TEDx, i.e. independently-produced. These two speakers are so different, it’s actually quite amazing that their ideas and messages actually… Read More