Categories
Computer stuff

Google Lays Out Its Mobile User Experience Strategy – Mobile Blog – InformationWeek

I found this on Kottke.org. Link to the full article at end. It has good advice for web designers and web app designers for mobile applications, and it may well be good to think about for my own purposes as the Lyric Fest redesign work continues.

“Understanding users, anywhere, anytimeRechis said that Google breaks down mobile users into three behavior groups:

A. “Repetitive now”
B. “Bored now”
C. “Urgent now”

The “repetitive now” user is someone checking for the same piece of information over and over again, like checking the same stock quotes or weather. Google uses cookies to help cater to mobile users who check and recheck the same data points.

The “bored now” are users who have time on their hands. People on trains or waiting in airports or sitting in cafes. Mobile users in this behavior group look a lot more like casual Web surfers, but mobile phones don’t offer the robust user input of a desktop, so the applications have to be tailored.

The “urgent now” is a request to find something specific fast, like the location of a bakery or directions to the airport. Since a lot of these questions are location-aware, Google tries to build location into the mobile versions of these queries.”

via Google Lays Out Its Mobile User Experience Strategy – Mobile Blog – InformationWeek.

Categories
Computer stuff

Welcome to our velvet prison, say the boys and girls from Apple. – By Jack Shafer – Slate Magazine

Jack Shafer wrote an excellent article in Slate about the closedness of the new devices that Apple is foisting on us. Welcome to our velvet prison, say the boys and girls from Apple. – By Jack Shafer – Slate Magazine. I hope people continue to buy the excellent Mac computers that Apple makes, which are open platforms, and shun the iPad until it also becomes open. Wepad, from Germany, is supposed to come out in the summer and be based on ANdroid/Linux. I am waiting for that, or any other open tablet device, and I will gladly accept inferior battery life to have openness. Also, I could easily move on to an Android phone, and I hear another great one is coming along soon.

Categories
Books Computer stuff

The threat of closed digital devices, iPad version

Today the lame jokes about Steve Jobs being Moses carrying the iTablet down from the mountain turned quickly to much lamer jokes about iPads and feminine hygiene. But I think the name was not the only reason for this negative response. There are various ways that the iPad delivered less than was expected and definitely less than it could have. Instead of an open platform, like Apple’s superb Mac line of computers, it is an overgrown iPod Touch. It restricts you to the applications Apple approves. I don’t care that there are 140,000 of them; I care about the ones that will never be because of the Appstore Cerberus. Also, what’s with the refusal to allow multitasking? Under the constraints of a device as small as the iPhone, this is perhaps acceptable (but why can Droid phones do it so easily?) but for such a device it seems like a really stupid restriction.

What’s much worse, in my mind, is that the iPad may succeed wildly (Dave Parry, @academicdave on Twitter, tweeted today: “The problem with the iPad, is it just might succeed. http://bit.ly/c1DUPo (via @Chanders)”). Then we will have DRM’d e-books all over the place, competitors will try to have the same closed mentality embedded in their devices, people will begin to forget the freedom to install any program on your computer. I fervently hope we are not witnessing the beginning of the end of the consumer-oriented computer as an open platform.

Apple did choose temptingly low prices for the various versions of the iPad and I can see lots of attractions for students and book/textbook publishers. The device is not all bad. It’s truly tempting me, which made me sit down and articulate the above to stay level-headed.

Ideas for the above, and lots of good discussions, can be found at createdigitalmusic.com, siliconAngle, Ars Technica, CNET, the New York Times, and Gizmodo on (more than) eight things that suck about the iPad.

UPDATE: See this post for the point that the iPad does allow unrestricted Web apps, and these are truly open with HTML5 and other free technologies. Point taken, but why only web apps are unrestricted?

Incidentally, I am going to pay attention to the State of the Union Address, which is on right now, but not by watching it. My desire to hear oratory, even excellent oratory from people I respect, is non-existent any more. When it’s all summarized in a newspaper online so I can get the main points in less than five minutes.

Categories
Books Computer stuff Fun

Today’s reading

Non-work reading, that is.

  • Don’t Make Me Think by Steve Krug, second edition, 2006. This is a very enjoyable book on how to design easy-to-use web sites. Got it as an e-book, and the clunky process of downloading Adob’e e-book reading software before I could download the book was ironically exactly contrary to the main message of the book.
  • WordPress 2.8 Theme Design by Tessa Blakeley Silver, 2009. This version of a book I already have in hard copy covers a more recent WordPress release than the one my hard copy book covers. Pleasingly, the publishers, Packt publishing, allow you to download an unrestricted PDF, as opposed to the publishers of Krug book, who does not deserve a link here. It’s OK, book publishers, like iTunes has shown (after too long a time), there is no reason to panic and only release DRMed digital copies. Most of your buyers are law-abiding. Seriously.

You only get one guess at what my main activity revolved around for the better part of today.

Categories
Computer stuff

Google Chrome for Mac now accepts extensions

Yes, very geeky, I know. But some of you, I also know, will appreciate the notice.

So far, so good; Feedly works fine, and so does Readability, Instapaper and Evernote Clipper. And I like very much the Google Wave notifier.

Categories
Books Computer stuff

Two tricks for better reading online

I recently started using Readability (a Firefox extension) to read certain web pages. It does an excellent job in capturing the main text area on many a page (but it does not work on many, such as Friendfeed.com, which auto-update constantly). You can format the text in various ways for easy readability (apt name) and once you discover you want to keep it for future reference you can put it in Evernote by the Firefox bookmarklet.

Today I started using yet another such tool I was reading about in Lifehacker: Instapaper. For some reason I had checked it out in the summer and forgot all about it. I suspect it was because I wanted Evernote to be the default place for all my notes. But today I am seeing that instapaper can be a first-pass place for interesting sites, and items I read there are archived online automatically for me or I can grab them and stick them into Evernote in the same way as with Readability. But Instapaper has a big advantage over Readability for browsers (like Chrome) that have (on the Mac, for now) no extension capability: it is a bookmarklet and a site and it can be accessed, therefore, with any browser.So on we go: better tools, more reading online. Now to moderate that and find only the good things to read!

Categories
Books Computer stuff

Study: Rumors of Written-Word Death Greatly Exaggerated | Epicenter | Wired.com

Study: Rumors of Written-Word Death Greatly Exaggerated | Epicenter | Wired.com. An interesting look at how much more we are reading now that the (on-screen) printed word is so easily available.

Categories
Computer stuff

ScribeFire for blog writing

I know, I promised not to post geeky stuff here. But, for anyone who might benefit from this information, I note that ScribeFire is a neat Firefox extension that handles blogging.