Updated: 1/30/2004; 8:09:27 AM.
a hungry brain
Bill Maya's Radio Weblog
        

Thursday, September 26, 2002

What do the following people have in common?

  • A trombonist expanding the possibilities of improvisation
  • An artist working in three dimensions with glass beads
  • A molecular exobiologist studying bacterial communication
  • A roboticist designing self-reconfigurable robots
  • A historian tracing the influence of technological advances on the evolution of ideas during the Renaissance

These and 19 others are recepients of MacArthur Foundation Genius Grants [Slashdot]

    

Roll Your Own Browser [Slashdot]
Mozilla Jumps on 'Lean Browser' Bandwagon [Slashdot]    

LAN Camera Review [Slashdot]    

Ray Ozzie has a couple comments about the digital dashboard I pointed to yesterday.  Ray does have some good points in his critique.  Activities with specific modalities should be grouped.  Like Ray I don't believe a dashboard is the place you should do all your work.  However, it can be a place where you can get an overview of your applications (specifically what they are doing for you and maybe a taste of what they contain), a jumping off point, and a place that you can use to combine information to do new things (of course publishing/sharing springs to mind).  In that way it is more of a replacement for the Windows desktop than it is a replacement for e-mail, office, or instant messaging.

First, a disclaimer, I am not in the digital dashboard business.  However, I like the approach and I am a supporter of exploring where this could go (testing the boundaries).  Here are some additional things to think about (this isn't necessarily a rebuttal to Ray, but more thinking points to better examine the issue):

1) A dashboard works for many people.  The great success Yahoo has had with myYahoo shows that average users really like this approach.  My wife, my mother in-law, and many others I know do all their computing in the browser.  They were all new to computing in 1997.  Their home page is myYahoo.  Their desktop is the browser.  They are comfortable with it.  I think this is very common. 

2) Much of the resistance to browser dashboards derives from legacy behavior -- a familiarity with existing tools (which sprang up at different times and built behavior patterns of behavior that are hard to break).  How many of the 6 b people on this earth use the existing legacy PC apps?  5%?  We are at the infancy of information technology from that perspective.  The trend may also be against this legacy behavior, many of the people that have entered the computing world over the last five years are completely browser centric.

3) New "webby" approaches can lead to superior behavior.  While I generally like my e-mail app, the smooth Google like search capability of Zoe makes me think I am missing the boat.  I also would like to have all the info I have access to presented in a way that makes it easy for me to publish it and manipulate it in ways that make it easily shareable.  Documents and application silos block me from doing this.  

4) The browser as we know it has been hobbled.  It is malformed due to a lack of innovation.  It can do a lot more.  It can be changed to accomodate more desktop PC functionality in application specific ways that don't seriously impare the simplicity of HTML for the data or for certain aspects of the interface.  Will it do everything?  Of course it won't, but it could accomodate much more than it has.   I am working on this....

[John Robb's Radio Weblog]    

Ray Ozzie: Software Platform Dynamics. [Scripting News] - "Platforms in the absence of applications cannot be expected to be self-financing until they are well on the road to ubiquity, regardless of theoretical margins." Reminds me of AppForge    

The British government posted a 55 page document on the web intended to prove Iraq needs bombing. Prime Minister Tony Blair hopes the evidence in the dossier will convince sceptics of the need to take action, ahead of an emergency sitting of the UK Parliament to discuss the crisis. [Adam Curry: Adam Curry's Weblog]

The Sunday Herald reports that President Bush planned an Iraq 'regime change' before becoming President. "The United States has for decades sought to play a more permanent role in Gulf regional security. While the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein." 

Iraq war hawks have plans to reshape entire Mideast (from Boston Globe)

How a War With Iraq Will Change the World - maybe (from Fortune)

    

© Copyright 2004 William J. Maya.
 

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