I recently finished watching Gary Hustwit’s Helvetica. Yes, it’s a documentary about the ubiquitous typeface. Pretty sure I heard about it first from Paul (@ppedrazzi), which makes sense, given the content. I like most documentaries, and this one appeals to the wannabe designer and font, erm typeface, nerd in me. It’s also an interesting historical study in the… Read More
Author: Jake
Clara Shih Joins the Starbucks Board Of Directors
If you doubted the power of social, this bit of news might serve as a wake-up call, or it might reenforce your beliefs. Twenty-Nine-Year-Old Hearsay Social CEO Clara Shih Joins Starbucks Board Of Directors | TechCrunch Back in 2007, Clara mashed up Salesforce and Facebook into an unofficial app called Faceforce. Creepy, yes, but very… Read More
The Scoop on WebCenter Evangelism
Sometimes, I write about work stuff. This is one of those times. You may have seen recently that Noel (@noelportugal) and I joined a brand-spanking, new team called WebCenter evangelism. You might also recall that the team’s mission is: . . . to raise the profile of Oracle in all of the markets/conversations in which WebCenter… Read More
The Design of Road Signs
Even though I read several design blogs, it’s not very often I come across anything about road signs, let alone two different pieces about different influential designers. Today, I did. First, there’s this bit on the English pair Jock Kinneir and Margaret Calvert, who were “the graphic designers standardised the road network, created many of its… Read More
The LunaTik Pen, Stylus and, Well, Pen
Apparently, I’m not alone in thinking that tablets would be a whole lot more usable and useful with a good stylus, and it’s always good to have a pen. So, why not combine the two into something awesome? Check out the LunaTik Pen, straight from the minds of the designer who created the TikTok iPod… Read More
NY Times R&D Has a Sci-Fi Mirror Called Reveal
Check this out, the NY Times Research & Development Lab has a prototype of that smart mirror you see in sci-fi movies like Total Recall and Minority Report. It’s called Reveal, and it looks awesome. Reveal Project – Personal Data Mirror from NYT R&D on Vimeo. More importantly, the NY Times has an R&D lab?
Another Cool Design Tool, UXPin
UXPin (h/t TechCrunch) eases the pain of converting paper prototypes into digital wireframes by making the process as simple as taking and emailing a photo. OK, there are some caveats. First, you’ll need to use their paper prototype notebooks, which look to be very nice. They have web app and an iPhone app notebooks. Then,… Read More
Very Cool, Android Design Preview
This is just plain sweet. Check out Android Design Preview (h/t Engadget), a Java utility that allows you to preview your hi-fi Android mockups (or anything on your computer for that matter) live on the device: Sounds like you’ll need the Android SDK too to use adb, Android Debug Bridge. Kudos to Roman Nurik (@romannurik) for… Read More
CEO Bans Email, Wins at PR
This smacks of a PR play, albeit a successful one. CEO bans email, encourages social networking — Engadget Even so, I wonder if the results of the experiment will ever see the same level of transparency. I’ve been among those who proclaim email dead, but over the years, email has become more pervasive, not less.… Read More
Developeronomics
Presented without comment, I give you The Rise of Developeronomics, please forgive the damn interstitial. It’s six pages without a full-page version; the tl;dr version is invest in developers, ideally the 10x ones because this is the only investment that will hold value over the next few years. An interesting read for sure. I have some quibbles,… Read More
AppsLab News
2011 has been a year of change for the ‘Lab. We welcomed a new member in May, Noel Portugal (@noelportugal), but then lost Rich (@rmanalan) to Atlassian in August and Anthony (@anthonyslai) to Taleo in September. Uncertainty played a role in each of their departures. For quite some time, the future of this team has… Read More
Three Small and Useful Development Tools for a Monday
Last week, I came across a few development tools that I wanted to share. The first is Mobilizer, recommended to me by a new friend, Noël Jaffré (@noeljaffre) from the Fatwire acquisition. Mobilizer is an Adobe AIR app that lets you preview mobile content from your desktop. Currently, it can render the iPhone 4, HTC EVO, Palm… Read More
This USB Stick is a Dual-Core Computer
Check out Cotton Candy: Cotton Candy: FXI technologies’ USB stick-size portable computer prototype with a dual-core 1.2-GHz Samsung Exynos ARM CPU. That’s the same processor in a Samsung Galaxy S II, by the way. Also, it has 802.11n Wi-Fi capability, Bluetooth, HDMI-out and a microSD memory slot. This USB Stick is a Dual-Core Computer | Geekosystem Wow. Imagine… Read More
Interesting Take on the New Google App for iPad
Google dropped a new version of its search app for iPad recently, and TNW has an interesting take, i.e. this new app is a Chrome OS Trojan Horse. I rarely use the Google Search iPad app, although past versions have showcased some very cool design patterns for iPad development. Not exactly sure why, but it… Read More
Twine Advances the Internet of Things
I do love the internet of things, and Twine looks like a simple way to add connectivity to everyday objects without too much fuss. ‘Twine’ Foreshadows A Future Where All Objects Talk To The Internet | TechCrunch Twine reminds me of stripped down Sun SPOTs. Anyway, they’re on Kickstarter now, raising money to make these… Read More
We Have a Google+ Page
Now that Google+ pages are open to anyone, I had to create one for us. Find it here. This blog and my Google Reader shares are the center of my universe, and I use dlvr.it to push content to Twitter (@theappslab) and our Facebook page. The only reason I do this is because unlike years ago,… Read More
Focus Your Time
I’ve been missing for a while, spending some quality time away from this space, but now, I’m back and better than ever. Or something. Anyway, a few weeks ago, this post about how Jack Dorsey spends eight hours every day working at both Twitter and Square revealed something interesting that everyone can use. Not the… Read More
Change and Inattentional Blindness, I Love This Stuff
I don’t recall how I discovered You Are Not So Smart, but it’s definitely worth reading. Today’s posts were about inattentional blindness and change blindness. I’m tempted to include the visual material here, but then you wouldn’t click through and the link love might be lost and my admiration of the blog would be useless.… Read More
Musings on IT, Side Projects and Users
When a side project takes on a life of its own, you feel both intensely gratified and frightened all at once. This has been my experience with all the side projects I’ve been involved with anyway. On the one hand, the reason you build product at all is to solve a problem users have, ideally… Read More
Siri Will Be Huge, If It Can Scale
The thing that sold my wife on the iPhone 4S was Siri, and she spent the evening after we finally got one seeing what Siri could do. Since then, a mere two days, Siri’s had several outages. Going through the coverage, it seems Siri is a beta service, which was suprising to read, given how… Read More