January 31, 2006

links for 2006-01-31

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm

January 30, 2006

links for 2006-01-30

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:18 pm
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January 29, 2006

Do picture IDs really mean anything?

Filed under: My Life | Lindsay @ 9:44 pm

I have been wondering about something lately and I thought I’d see if anyone else has some insight to offer. This weekend I bought some clothes at the mall and I was asked to show my driver’s license. That in itself isn’t odd, since some stores ask for that as a policy, and sometimes clerks just ask for it when they don’t think the signature on your credit card is legible. This time the clerk actually did a double take… she looked at my picture, then looked at my license and then at the picture again for a minute before shrugging and handing it back to me. And that didn’t suprise me… but what did is the fact that she didn’t say anything after all.

About a year and a half ago I reached a significant, life-changing personal milestone: I stepped on on the scale and weighed 95lbs less than I had almost 2 years before that day. I lost all that weight faithfully following the Atkins diet and during the process watched the surprised expressions on the faces of family, friends and acquaintances that hadn’t seen me in a while when they didn’t recognize me and suddenly realized who I was. I look like a completely different person.

Judge for yourself:

Driver’s License pic Recent similar pic
Driver's License Pic Recent ID-type Pic

Knowing that I am the same person in both those pictures, you can definitely see the resemblance, but if your responsibility was making sure that a person is who they say they are, wouldn’t you at least question it if you were presented with my license? Especially if you were an airport security agent in the U.S. with our perpetual state of “Orange Alert” because everyone is a potential terrorist?

So, why is it that I have been through several airports and many financial transactions where I’ve been asked to show my license but never once been asked whether I was really the person in the picture? Am I (and other people I know) deluded into thinking that I look significantly different now? Is it simply a race thing, not questioning because I’m a white female? Do I look particularly trustworthy? Could it possibly be people trying to avoid embarrassing me (I can’t imagine that!)? Or is it that no one pays attention to ID pictures after all? Don’t get me wrong, I’m not asking to be interrogated every time I show my license. I’m just curious as to why no one has ever asked…

If you’re wondering why I haven’t updated my license, mainly it’s because I’m lazy. I’ve been waiting for it to become more of a hassle to not change it than to wait at the DMV for 3 hours and stand in 5 or more lines to get it fixed. But since no one has ever bothered me about it, it’s not yet worth the pain. Besides, I figure if there is anywhere where I will encounter trouble proving that I’m really who I say I am, the DMV will be the place.

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Self-replicating robots

One more step towards the future, guys. Make these self-replicating robots nano-sized and it’ll be The Diamond Age

Flying Dogs

The video called “Birds” on this site is so cool. Hairy dogs + gravity + slow motion = very cute!

links for 2006-01-29

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:17 pm

January 28, 2006

links for 2006-01-28

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:17 pm

January 27, 2006

Stiki Pad - the new personal wiki

Filed under: Reviews | Lindsay @ 10:38 pm

Stiki PadI was deliciousing today and saw a link to a beta site called Stiki Pad. When I clicked on the link it was an email signup form with the tagline “Launching (very soon)”. I read the blurb and sent my email and started adding the site to my own del.icio.us archive. When I hit save and the page refreshed, it was live! I guess they weren’t fooling around with the term “very soon”!

So I signed up and started playing with it. I’m pretty impressed.

I’ve toyed with wikis before and I’m always looking for new ways to store and organize the information I gather. My fascination with informatics software started when I was introduced to Microsoft OneNote. The free-form note storage with tabbed pages and deep searches was great, but code snippet tab-stops were destroyed by the automatic formatting and that was a problem since a lot of things I wanted to store were code. I found Instiki and played with it for a while but I didn’t like having to start the Ruby WebBrick server every time I wanted to use it. I was completely fascinated with the micro-content wiki variation TiddlyWiki for several months, and even created a version of it that allowed you to tag your entries but for some reason or another I just quit using it after a while. I didn’t want to go to the trouble of hosting my own wiki online mainly because most of them run on Apache servers. But Stiki Pad requires no independant hosting or setup and looks like it will be a good alternative for me.

Besides the fact that the site has a nice, clean, pleasing design, there are several things about Stiki Pad that make it stand out beyond the things that you’d expect from a wiki service:

  • You can access your wikis by defining your own subdomain. For instance: I could create macrolinz.stikipad.com
  • *You can associate your own domain with your wiki
  • *You have almost complete control over the look and feel of your wiki: You can style your wiki using CSS and set up templates which control the whole page structure if you want to reuse a format you’ve created that was useful
  • You can tag your wiki pages
  • *You can monetize your wiki by displaying your Google Ads!
  • *You can upload files to store on their servers so you can store more than just textual information
  • You can grab your data as RSS, HTML or PDF (Stiki Pad is not a walled garden)!

There is a free account but some of the advanced services (*) are only for paying plans. The plans look fair except possibly except for the bandwidth restrictions. And the amount of storage could potentially be increased, considering that the standard for most services that offer online storage is at least 1GB for free these days. Don’t plan on using this site as a substitute for a blog if you expect to get any significant amount of traffic. But for personal use, keeping family and friends in touch and keeping small groups of people organized and collaborating, it would be a good choice.

In all this seems like a very interesting service that I plan to find some good uses for. Today was a good day for delicious surfing!

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links for 2006-01-27

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:18 pm

January 26, 2006

links for 2006-01-26

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:18 pm

January 25, 2006

links for 2006-01-25

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:18 pm

January 24, 2006

Yahoo gives up Search to Google

Filed under: FutureSpec | Lindsay @ 10:37 am

Interesting news from Yahoo today:

Yahoo! Inc., one of the first Internet search companies, has capitulated to Google Inc. in the battle for market dominance.

“We don’t think it’s reasonable to assume we’re going to gain a lot of share from Google,” Chief Financial Officer Susan Decker said in an interview. “It’s not our goal to be No. 1 in Internet search. We would be very happy to maintain our market share.”

While the news itself isn’t very surprising, its refreshing to see Yahoo actually admit publicly what most people already knew. It proves that Yahoo’s managers aren’t quite as dense and self-deluded as lot of big companies management these days and it probably indicates that we’ll be seeing some potentially interesting and disruptive offerings coming from them soon. At the very least, it shows that they’ve realized they need to change their focus, but the effects of that realization have been apparent for a while now with some of the things they’ve debuted in the recent past.

My prediction is still that Yahoo is going to go for any area that’s not under the direct line-of sight for Google’s mission to “collect and organize the world’s information”. And I still think that community and socialware is going to be their saving grace. Now the next concession for search should be coming from MSN… But that’s one article I never expect to see.

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January 23, 2006

links for 2006-01-23

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:17 pm

January 22, 2006

The Digg Paradox - success is costly

Filed under: My Life, Web Survival | Lindsay @ 4:18 pm

I learned several lessons this weekend starting with this one: be careful what you Digg. If it becomes popular, you’re going to piss off a lot of people, possibly even the owner of the site you were trying to promote!

I like looking at Digg because I usually find some pretty awesome things there. My understanding of the purpose of the site is to be a community that allows you expose interesting things you “dig up” on the web to an audience who might also find them interesting. I haven’t played with it as much as TAD, and I have never had a lot of success (digg count) with things that I have submitted myself. Until a few days ago.

I was looking at del.icio.us/popular and there was a link to a site that had a video of some very freaky magnetic fluid moving sculpture art. I thought: “Woah, that’s cool! I wonder if that’s on Digg??”.

I searched and didn’t find a match. I considered posting something about the video on my blog and submitting my post to Digg so that I might get some traffic off of it, but decided not to because I’ve seen so many horribly critical (to the point of abusive) comments on submissions that other people have made about how evil blogs are for “exploiting” Digg to bring traffic to their own sites by “stealing” the content from others. So I submitted the link as I found it. The whole process took about 5 to 10 minutes without a lot of deliberation on my part, and I figured, like most things I submitted, I’d be lucky to get more than 20 diggs of people who shared my fascination. I was very wrong.

My submission on Digg: 1953 diggs!!

(more…)

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links for 2006-01-22

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:24 pm
  • Like an intelligent Yahoo Answers… interesting questions with actual USEFUL answers. Good site to keep an eye on.
  • A service that lets you send yourself an email at a specified time in the future so that you remind yourself of something that you need to do at that point. Available as an RSS feed as well. Not sure what advantage it has over RememberTheMilk but there

links for 2006-01-22

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:17 pm

January 21, 2006

links for 2006-01-21

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:22 pm
»

January 20, 2006

How to make Outlook into a Faux-Gmail

Filed under: HowTo, Informatics | Lindsay @ 6:45 pm

Have you ever said to yourself, “Wow, I really love the way Gmail lets me put labels on my mail so that I can find stuff in several contexts, but I can’t use Gmail for my work email - all the boss man will let me use is yechy old Outlook”. You did? Really? Wow, me too!

Well all hope is not lost. You can have your Outlook and labels too. They’re just called “categories” instead. And with a little bit of configuration, script installation and modification, you can have very similar functionality as you get in Gmail, but on your local PC and without any scary contextual ads.

Warning: this may look like a lot of work and it is initially, but it was something that I really wanted mainly because I had trouble finding things in I had filed in all the subfolders that I used to organize mail previously. Search wouldn’t work because I had to search each subfolder individually leaving me to try to remember all the potential subfolders I could have filed a message in. I wasn’t able to find any 3rd party add-ins for Outlook that didn’t restrict me to only a single way to organize any message so I decided to hack it out myself. The set up was worth it to me, but may not be to you. If you’re ready to take the plunge, then at least you have a guide!

(more…)

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links for 2006-01-20

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:21 pm

January 19, 2006

More proof of our impending liberation from the OS

Filed under: FutureSpec | Lindsay @ 10:16 pm

I just found a soon to be released piece of hardware that supports my hypothesis that Operating Systems will be irrelevant in a few more years. Lexar is coming out with a new USB drive that will let you install and run your software directly from it using some custom software of its own.

The software, PowerToGo, lets most existing Windows applications run unmodified from the flash drives, Lexar said. The goal is to let users carry their PC environments, including browser settings and instant-messenger clients, in a tiny thumb drive.

…The software will be developed as an open standard, and the Lexar products will be compatible with “most consumer and electronic mobile devices,” according to a company statement.

How cool is that? (more…)

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links for 2006-01-19

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:22 pm

January 18, 2006

links for 2006-01-18

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:22 pm

January 17, 2006

GTalk in Trillian

Google made me smile today by adopting the XMPP standard for GTalk so that I can now use GTalk in Trillian! My IM circle is now complete!

links for 2006-01-17

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:21 pm

January 15, 2006

links for 2006-01-15

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm

January 14, 2006

Coloring Grayscale Patterns with Gradient Maps

Filed under: HowTo, Photoshop | Lindsay @ 6:12 pm

Tutorial Samples
I really enjoy making and playing with patterns. I don’t know why I like it so much… I usually don’t have any good practical use for what I come up. Most of my results are fairly busy and not suited for the web design and photo retouching projects that I do for “production” most often. But I can spend hours playing with patterns anyway. I should have been a gift wrap or fabric designer instead!

A lot of the patterns I come up with end up being grayscale which at first doesn’t seem to be very interesting. But actually there’s a lot of potential in greyscale patterns. They don’t limit you by having pre-existing colors that you may or may not like, or force you to try to change one color that you don’t like to make it fit into your project’s color scheme. They’re blank color canvases, just waiting for you.

This tutorial will be about the Gradient Map method of colorizing two different types of grayscale patterns. This method can give you complete control over the way the colors are rendered, or allow you to use blending modes with preset options to come up with some interesting and sometimes surprising coloration. Gradient Map shading works by taking all the colors in an image in order of value and replacing any pixel in an image by its “match” in a gradient you choose. It is an interesting effect but depending on what gradient you choose to apply can often come out with garish results. You’ll learn how to take even the most gaudy gradients and turn them into something more sophisticated.

Grayscale patterns can be grouped into two categories, each of which has slightly different applications for Gradient Maps:

Limited Shade Patterns

2 shade (B&W)
2 Shade Grayscale Pattern
3 shade (black, white & gray)
3 Shade Grayscale Pattern
These are halftone patterns I made for another tutorial you can download.

Many shade grayscale patterns

Unlimited amount of shades
Many Shade Grayscale Pattern Detail

(more…)

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links for 2006-01-14

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:21 pm

January 13, 2006

It’s so cute!

This robot is so cute!!! Made from a sandwich container! Kawaii!!

links for 2006-01-13

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:21 pm
Referred by VMWare

My tutorial on P2V with NTBackup got picked up by the VMWare blog! Cool! They gave me an inadvertent gender change, but I guess it’s not expected for a girl to know how to do these sort of things!!

January 12, 2006

Oil-Cooled PC??

“Do you want fries with that?” is the first thing that comes to mind when looking at this oil-cooled PC. The second thing is: just imagine trying to take that CPU back to Fry’s customer service if it doesn’t work…

links for 2006-01-12

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:22 pm

January 11, 2006

links for 2006-01-11

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm

January 10, 2006

RTFToS! Signing your content away…

Filed under: My Life, Web Survival | Lindsay @ 10:56 pm

I was looking at a new beta search engine called Browsr that had some potentially interesting features for creating your own private and sharable directories of links. You have to create an account to see what those features would do, so I started filling in the info and then dutifully read the Terms of Service.

I have friends that laugh at me for doing that but I don’t sign up for anything online until I’ve read the ToS, and many sites I’ve ended up declining joining because of the evilness that I find embedded in that document. I’ve even been known to go so far as emailing the site support asking for clarification of points in the terms if I’m still interested in joining the service. About half the time I actually get satisfactory responses, and I also have written documentation to fall back on just in case.

But back to Browsr. There are some evil conditions listed in their ToS unfortunately, so I will not be joining their membership. Browsr is a link aggregator, a collaborative filter, a bookmarking service… it points to things, but it has this in it’s terms:
(more…)

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links for 2006-01-10

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm

Keep your old Trillian Buddy List on a new computer

Filed under: HowTo, Systems Engineering, Configuration | Lindsay @ 10:57 am

I really like Trillian and it lets me keep my buddy list well organized, but it doesn’t keep your settings on a server so when you install it on another PC you have to do all the organization again manually. After searching the support forums, I found a solution that saved me that trouble. As part of a developing series of posts with things I’ve discovered moving from one laptop to another, here’s how to copy/move your Trillian buddy lists so you don’t have to rebuild them.

This will work to builid your list a fresh install or replace it on an install you’ve already been using. If it’s a fresh install, make sure that you’ve already installed all the plugins for the services you want to connect to (MSN, AIM, Yahoo, etc…).

  1. Exit Trillian on the target computer if it’s running
  2. On the source computer, make a copy of this file and send it somewhere it’s accessible to the target:
    C:\Program Files\Trillian\users\default\Buddies.xml
  3. On the target computer, rename that file (just in case) and paste the one you copied in the same directory
  4. Start up Trillian on the target computer and you should see your list configured like the one on the source.

Easy right?

As a side note, my two favorite plugins for Trillian are the spellchecker and the splitter (I am notorious for typing too much). And I also can’t live without SIMP, a Trillian compatible message encryption tool to keep your messages private (free for one provider in a Lite version, but cheap to cover them all).

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January 9, 2006

How to convert a physcial computer to a virtual machine

Filed under: HowTo, Virtualization, Systems Engineering | Lindsay @ 10:04 pm

I recently got a new replacement laptop for work. I had a lot of stuff on the old laptop after 2+ years of use and so I didn’t want to have to rush myself in remembering everything in one or two passes before formatting it to send back to the office. There are always things I forget when I’m mostly focused on moving data files over: files in “hidden” places like IM logs and non-file based data such as product keys, configuration info, settings for programs and other stuff. So I decided the best thing to do was make it into a VM and take my time about reinstalling and configuring the new laptop to match.

After some Googling I found a forum conversation on ArsTechnica about how some people did it. I had been planning to use Symantech Ghost but the version my company supplied was old and I didn’t want to shell out another $70 of my own. Someone mentioned in the post that you could use NTBackup, a free, already-there backup application on Windows XP. He said it was actually a preferred method because NTBackup is actually there to provide recovery services from backups made on different hardware. There would be no tweaking of drivers necessary on the new VM.

So I tried the P2V using NTBackup and it worked well. My last attempt (out of 3) was relatively painless. The first two failed because of miscalculations on my part. Since I had trouble finding information on how to do it and I generally need more detailed steps than the hardware gurus give me, I thought I’d document the process here in case anyone else has the same challenges I did. (more…)

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I guess I’ll eat worms…

Filed under: Macro Linz, My Life | Lindsay @ 5:43 pm

Pete on Mashable.com reviewed a site today called EgoSurf. It’s a popularity meter that you can enter your name or aliases and sites that you associate with and get a reading in “egopoints”.

I thought I’d give it a try…

Well, my ego is apparently very small. Fortunately, I’m an introvert so I don’t need a lot of external validation (that’s what I can tell myself, yeah).

I only got 1108 points for this new blog. I suppose that’s not too bad considering it’s only existed for 3 weeks.

I got 4095 for my old not-updated-for-more-than-a-year personal blog.

Running the alias I use just about everywhere with del.icio.us, flickr, and a few other sites as the site got me 2966 points.

I guess it’s better than my Technorati Rank: 1,063,755!

Oh well, not everyone can be popular, I guess. I have better things to do than worry about my popularity on the internet, like slinking off in my corner and singing the worm song to myself!!

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links for 2006-01-09

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm

January 8, 2006

Woo! Makezine!

Awesome! My post on Amazing Circles got picked up by Make Magazine for the links via Del.icio.us on their site. Not a featured article or anything but exciting to me just the same!

links for 2006-01-08

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm

January 7, 2006

Quick and Easy Color Correction

Filed under: HowTo, Photoshop | Lindsay @ 11:25 pm

I just figured out an accurate way to correct color casts in your photos in 4 easy steps with Photoshop without having to use Curves or advanced color management.

Here’s a picture of some penguins with a yellow/greenish cast:
Color Cast Removal Penguins - before

And here they are after the technique, in their black and bright white glory:
Color cast removal Penguins - after

How to do it:

(more…)

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links for 2006-01-07

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm

Contact Surface: the new User Interface

Filed under: My Life | Lindsay @ 9:41 am

I probably shouldn’t be so entertained by this but I am. I was deliciousing and saw a post with the title Doogate and couldn’t resist clicking on it. Doogate is a search engine with a Googly feel. Clicking on the About link to see what’s different about it provided me with a good chuckle:

The search engine is on the Internet one of most important applications, user can find the information in the vast Internet information which the user needs, deeply user’s affection.

Obviously the site must not originally be in English, though no where does it say what country it’s actually from.

This transliterated gem was toward the middle of the page:

Doogate pay great attention to the user the use contact surface.
Doogate designed the search result, lets the user use human nature design contact surface. The user glances over the search result no longer is looks from side or left, that really too tired cross-eye clear vision said doogate let you look to front and smooth. Doogate search to let your search conveniently, is more comfortable!

For some reason the idea of the UI as a “contact surface” appeals to me and I think that will be my new buzzword for a while. I will also take inspiration from Doogate and work hard from now on to design projects to avoid the bane of user experience: “that really too tired cross-eye clear vision”!

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January 6, 2006

links for 2006-01-06

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm

Class Aggregation in CSS

Filed under: HowTo, CSS, Web Design | Lindsay @ 8:55 am

CSS is “teh awesome”. Being able to control the look and feel of an entire website with one file while simultaneously keeping your markup clean and creating a separation between presentation and code is a wonderful thing. But sometimes, especially for beginners, CSS itself isn’t necessarily used or written in the most efficient way. There’s a powerful feature in CSS that I don’t see a lot of people using or talking about and I thought I’d share it since it’s been useful to me in several projects.

Most people know about grouping: you can write your CSS classes with multiple selectors if they will share the same attributes.

body, div, p, td, .heading, #content {
        padding: 0;
        margin: 0;
        background-color: #fff;
}

Grouping can be useful and help keep your CSS from getting bulky with duplicate classes, but there’s an opposite approach that can also reduce duplication of code while providing some other benefits.

I don’t know if there’s an actual name for this practice but I call it “aggregation”. You may create CSS classes for specific attributes and apply them simultaneously to your HTML elements. The styles will aggregate and all of them will then display on the element:

.bluefont { color: #009; }
.padleft { padding: 0 0 0 10px; }
.yellowback { background-color: #ffd; }
.bottomborder { border-bottom: solid 1px black;}

You can apply the classes to HTML elements by separating them with spaces in the class attribute.

<div class=“bluefont yellowback”>This text has a blue font and yellow background.</div>
<div class=“bottomborder padleft”>This text is padded 10px on the left and has a border on the bottom</div>
<div class=“bluefont yellowback bottomborder padleft”>This text has all of the above</div>

The above code will result in something like this:

This text has a blue font and yellow background.
This text is padded 10px on the left and has a border on the bottom
This text has all of the above

Why is this useful? Because you can separate things like changing the colors of an element from it’s layout information and only apply the styles to the element as needed.

(more…)

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January 5, 2006

What is Web2.0?

Filed under: FutureSpec | Lindsay @ 4:40 pm

A lot of people have been speculating about what makes a site “Web2.0” and I have been putting together my own conception of it. I think that what is different about Web2.0 sites is not necessarily the content, AJAX, novelty, domain names with dots everywhere, or rounded corners and gradients. Instead, the most successful candidates are (a) extremely supportive of the two main purposes of interacting with the web and (b) incorporate two new factors that don’t exist on pre-Web2.0 sites.

The two behaviors people exhibit when going on-line are either gathering information from or contributing information to the web. Gathering is both searching for information and storing it so that you may find it again later. It is a selfish thing, all about consuming and using info for your own needs. Contributing is about actions such as blogging, participating in forums, commenting, collaborative filtering, and sharing content like photos and videos. It’s all producing and sociality.

I made the suggestion a while ago that Google = Information and Yahoo = Community, but you could also interpret that as Google = Gathering and Yahoo = Contributing. I ran across another Google/Yahoo comparison that implied that gathering and contributing are opposing behaviors and there is even a gender bias for one over the other. In my opinion the gender difference is mainly in which behavior you believe will benefit you the most on a personal level.

But, the behaviors are not exclusive of each other. I believe that they are flip sides of a coin and the best sites support them both at the same time. Useful pre-Web2.0 sites (such as Google and Yahoo) already cater to these behaviors in various degrees, but that’s just not enough. What makes a site Web2.0 is two factors that have really been the catalysts for the changes in our expectations of interaction with a service on the web: Metadata and Portability.

(more…)

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links for 2006-01-05

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm
What happened to MoMB??

I am missing my daily MoMB fix!! Nothing since the yearly wrap-up in mid December. Please come back! Must… have… betas…

January 4, 2006

FlickrRSS Plugin

Thanks to Dave Kellam of Eightface.com for his nice FlickrRSS plugin! I just wish I could figure out how often the RSS fires and how to manually trigger it (I added some photos to Flickr and want them to show up!!). It’s a cool plugin though and I recommend people check it out.

Google overload

Have I drunk too much of the Google Kool-aid? Why do I enjoy these rumors so much? At least I’m not the only one who gets caught up in it. I think the rumors are made from what people expect to happen next in the evolution of technology, so they just project those expectations on Google (the most likely candidate for making them happen) because they really want to see it all come to pass. Well, everything but the panda army at least…

links for 2006-01-04

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:20 pm
Laptop Travel Mouse

This PCMCIA slot storable mouse seems like a cool idea, but if it sticks out like my USB 2.0 hub card did, it will be destroyed in under 2 weeks.

I think Swiss Army should modify their cards to fit in the slot instead! Maybe one with a mini screwdriver toolkit…

Overcoming the OS

Filed under: FutureSpec | Lindsay @ 11:06 am

While looking for an interesting conference to attend this Spring, I found an article debating the usage of Flash over AJAX. Regardless of the technologies that will be used it had a good point in the last paragraph:

One thing is certain: the days of when people dismissed Internet clients as hopelessly inferior to native Windows clients are past. Everyone now understands that very sophisticated application functionality can be hosted in the browser, using its native capabilities plus some downloaded code. Applications should no longer be thought of as having a single runtime location: the Web allows them to execute co-operatively in real-time on the client and one or more servers. “It’s almost a new class of applications that’s fully on-demand and fully leverages the desktop,” Bill Appleton told me. “We’re really using both ends of this pipeline very effectively.”

I totally agree. Eventually the majority if not all applications will all be browser-based, server-hosted (loosely connected through web services with XMLRPC) but will still offer rich, user-friendly experiences that we’ve traditionally taken for granted from software that runs locally on our hardware. The evolution of web technologies is going to reach a point very soon where all that is important is having some hardware that can run a web browser to host these applications.
(more…)

January 3, 2006

links for 2006-01-03

Filed under: Bookmarks | Lindsay @ 12:19 pm
Google moves again

I may have to think about this some more but it looks like Google is putting more pieces into place to make it even more indespensible (and unavoidable) to our lives. If the theories about hubs and wireless access for everyone are true, this should be an interesting year.

January 2, 2006

Halftone Pattern Experiments

Filed under: HowTo, Photoshop | Lindsay @ 10:00 pm

We went to a Beck concert back in October and it was pretty awesome. One of the things that made it so interesting was the dynamic videos on the giant screens behind Beck and his crew. There was a guy who was bascially a VJ for the displays with some sort of scratch turntable-like hardware that he used to control the images and how they overlapped/changed/merged with each other. One of the effects I liked the most had multiple scales of a halftone pattern that merged together and made some pretty complex designs.

So inspired by that, I decided to play with halftone patterns today in Photoshop.

  • Halftone Pattern 1
  • Halftone Pattern 2
  • Halftone Pattern 3
  • Halftone Pattern 4
  • Halftone Pattern 5
  • Halftone Pattern 6
  • Halftone Pattern 7
  • Halftone Pattern 8
  • Halftone Pattern 9
  • Halftone Pattern 10
  • Halftone Pattern 11
  • Halftone Pattern 12
  • Halftone Pattern 13
  • Halftone Pattern 14
  • Halftone Pattern 15
  • Halftone Pattern 16
  • Halftone Pattern 17
  • Halftone Pattern 18
  • Halftone Pattern 19
  • Halftone Pattern 20
  • Halftone Pattern 21
  • Halftone Pattern 22
  • Halftone Pattern 23
  • Halftone Pattern 24
  • Halftone Pattern 25
  • Halftone Pattern 26
  • Halftone Pattern 27
  • Halftone Pattern 28
  • Halftone Pattern 29
  • Halftone Pattern 30
  • Halftone Pattern 31
  • Halftone Pattern 32
  • Halftone Pattern 33
  • Halftone Pattern 34
  • Halftone Pattern 35
  • Halftone Pattern 36

I started off with a basic halftone filter then duplicated and scaled by half. I played with different offsets between the patterns and several different blending options and opacity. I think there are probably thousands of other patterns that you could come up with but I ended up with about 37 interesting ones in a couple of hours of playing with it. Some of them are just two colors and made with two sizes of halftone (100% and 50%), others are 3 colors or made with 3 sizes (100%, 50% and 25%).

To create your own variations here’s basically what I did:
(more…)