Peter Nixon
I'm involved in music and multimedia.

 



Subscribe to "Peter Nixon" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

 

 

  Sunday, 2 April 2006


Everyware


Adam Greenfield has written one of the most provocative books in years. If the right people read it, Everyware: The Dawning Age of Ubiquitous Computing may do for the coming, computerless computing interface what Don Norman[base ']s The Design of Everyday Things did for design generally. Like Norman, Greenfield argues for good design not as an aesthetic issue but as an ethical and business imperative. There is an urgency and clarity to every word.

Everyware is both a prescription and a warning. Although films like Minority Report have made such ubicomp staples as the gestural interface look a bit silly, these kinds of interactivity are coming soon to a wall or object near you. Depending on who designs them and by what principles, they will work beautifully or badly. Everyware will enhance our lives by anticipating our needs or it will destroy our privacy [~] or both.

Besides Don Norman[base ']s book, the other piece of writing I sometimes thought of as I read Everyware was Walter Benjamin[base ']s [base "]The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.[per thou] Writing in 1937, Benjamin pondered what the existence of photographic reproduction did to the status of the unique work of art. If the Mona Lisa can be reproduced by lithography, what is the value of the Mona Lisa?

It[base ']s not that Greenfield writes like Benjamin (he doesn[base ']t). It[base ']s that both writers see and can describe changes in the world to which their contemporaries are oblivious. Greenfield is a friend and former member of Happy Cog so I have an interest in seeing his book do well. But if I didn[base ']t know him or couldn[base ']t stand him I would still highly recommend this book to anyone who cares about how design and technology are shaping our time.

Man I love everything Zeldman does, but I rarely post links, because his writing is often very specialised to his particular field of endeavour, so it gives me pleasure to quote the above, to show the quality of his thought, and of his passion for the rational digital life.

[Jeffrey Zeldman Presents The Daily Report]
1:30:33 AM    
comments? []


When Rudie brought Apple to Australia


Apple Computer was established 30 years ago on April 1 by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak. A year later, local technology pioneer, Rudie Hoess was introducing the Apple II computer to Australia.

On Apple's 30th anniversary, this gives a little Australian perspective to the story. Interesting.

[The Age Technology Headlines]
1:12:43 AM    
comments? []


Random: Prayer Doesn't Speed Healing; May Increase Complications


A new study has shown that not only is prayer not beneficial, it can actually be detrimental to heart patients...

Last year I posted about a Duke University study that showed that praying for heart catheterization patients had no positive effect on their health. Now a new study by the John Templeton Foundation has found that not only did prayer have no...

Sorry, religious dudes. Come back with science please.

[morons.org headlines]
12:49:54 AM    

comments? []


Long mobile phone use lifts tumour risk: study


The use of mobile phones over a long period of time can raise the risk of brain tumours, according to a new Swedish study.

Well there you go. I hate the bloody things. I do have one. As it spends most of its life lost somewhere, it's unlikely to give me any brain tumours.

[ABC News: Health]
12:40:03 AM    
comments? []


Onion Radio News: Judge Orders God To Break Up Into Smaller Deities


Judge Orders God To Break Up Into Smaller Deities

You just have to love The Onion.

[The Onion - Daily Content]
12:27:01 AM    
comments? []


Apple Converts Xserves from PowerPC to AMD.


Geoff Duncan (~1000 words)

When Apple announced in June 2005 it was planning to transition its Macintosh computer line to Intel-based processors, the entire Apple community was aghast: a move away from PowerPC would be a historic turning point for the company and its flagship computers. But a tiny portion of the Macintosh community was aghast for different reasons. They were thinking: "Intel processors? What about AMD?!" Well, today at a press event in Mountain View, they got their answer.

Wow!

Although I should warn my faithful two readers that this is in the April 1 edition of TidBITS.

By geoff@tidbits.com (Geoff Duncan). [TidBITS]
12:13:03 AM    
comments? []



Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2006 Peter Nixon.
Last update: 4/5/06; 7:27:27 AM.

April 2006
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30            
Mar   May


Archives