guardiantech + technology   24

Engelbart’s Violin >> Loper OS
Fascinating as the chorded keyboard is, its confinement to the ghetto of “crackpot technology” is but a symptom of the underlying disease: <a href="http://www.loper-os.org/?p=316">the total victory of the technological business model which caters primarily to the unskilled</a>.


Looking at the intriguing question of why the chorded keyboard never took off as an input mechanism.
interface  technology  ui  ux  charlesarthur 
19 hours ago by guardiantech
Why Tech CEOs seem so dumb >> Buzzfeed
Being wildly successful in tech is about anticipating change, and altering the status quo; being the 14th chief executive of a stodgy old major tech company is about extracting as much value as you can from the success it's already had. The CEOs of the Time Warners and Sonys and Yahoos and RIMs and even Microsofts of the world are experts only on their respective companies' existing businesses. They say things that sound stupid to us because they're not us, and because their goal for tech (to maximize profits at their companies) is not the same as ours (to get more awesome stuff that makes our lives better). They're not even really talking to us. They're talking to their boards.
technology 
13 days ago by guardiantech
How computers are creating a second economy without workers >> The Atlantic
When the disappointing jobs numbers were reported last week (employers added 120,000 jobs in March, about half the number reported in the two previous months), analysts tripped over themselves looking for an explanation. Of course, jobs numbers are bound to vary, but in my view the long-term trend calls for more jobs to disappear, and the reason is clear as day: the exploding Second Economy.</p><p>

The Second Economy -- a term the economist Brian Arthur uses to describe the computer-intensive portion of the economy -- is, quite simply, the virtual economy. One of its main byproducts is the replacement of low-productivity workers with computers. It's growing by leaps and bounds, brimming with optimistic entrepreneurs, and spawning a new generation of billionaires. In fact, the booming Second Economy will probably drive much of the economic growth in the coming decades.


The definition remains slippery, though: is EasyJet or Amazon a "second economy" company? Lots of what happens is achieved by humans; it couldn't happen without them. Instagram or Google are more like a "second economy" company, surely: far more automated.
economics  technology 
6 weeks ago by guardiantech
Why are atoms mostly empty space? >> Discover Magazine
If you understand (or accept) that an electron is also a wave, then this is a brilliant exposition of why electrons have specific orbits "around" the electron. It's not technology per se, but it has enabled the transistor, the laser, solar power…
technology 
december 2011 by guardiantech
The Death Of The Spec >> TechCrunch
"Earlier today, my colleague Matt Burns wrote a post noting that most tablet makers may be largely failing because they’ve sold their soul to Android and are now just in the middle of a spec war, which no one can win. I’m gonna go one step further in that line of thinking: the spec is dead.

"There have been a few key stories from the past couple of weeks that highlight this new reality. Barnes & Noble unveiled the new Nook Tablet. Consumer Reports looked at the iPhone 4S. And the first reviews came in about the Kindle Fire.

"On paper, the Nook Tablet is the Android-based reading tablet to buy. It has twice the RAM of the Kindle Fire, twice the built-in storage space, a better battery, and it’s lighter to boot. Yes, it’s $50 more expensive, but come on, the RAM difference alone is worth well more than that. Clearly, this is the better value for your money.

"And yet, the Nook Tablet will not outsell the Kindle Fire."

Exactly. Please, let specification-led posts die.
technology  from delicious
november 2011 by guardiantech
Why the Apple iPad is the future >> The Guardian
From January 2010: Dan Catt (one of the Guardian's developers) writes: "Like it or not, the iPad is going to change, radically, expectations of how we read - that's its key selling point. And even if the Amazon Kindle is easier on the eyes with its "virtual ink", and its battery lasts longer, the fact it's also grey, doesn't play Doodle Jump and, well, just looks a bit rubbish in comparison, will make all the difference in the end."

Seems rather prescient now.
ipad  apple  technology  from delicious
november 2011 by guardiantech
Cartooning vs. Technology: How Steve Jobs Ruined Comics >> tompappalardo.com
"In many ways, technology—especially consumer-driven technology—has been striving for the same thing as cartoonists for years now. Simpler, smaller, more streamlined. Minimalist. Removing as much of the object as possible, leaving only the key components (in technology’s case, the interface, the screen). Steve Jobs led the way for elegant and simple device design, and it’s a beautiful thing. But a cartoonist might reach a point where representing something in a super-simplified style when the object itself is already super-simplified becomes increasingly difficult. Let’s take a look at a few examples."<br />
<br />
Hilarious, and true.
charlesarthur  ipad  technology  comics  from delicious
september 2011 by guardiantech
Where the PC is headed: Plus is the New “Post” >> The Official Microsoft Blog
Frank Shaw, Microsoft's head of PR: "over the years some of the great experiences first delivered on a PC have been extended to smartphones, internet companions, tablets and, yes, even our cars. Today, the PC and these companion devices are all nodes on the network, connecting to cloud-based services to deliver real-time stock quotes, sports scores, and other updates we can’t imagine living without.<br />
"I’ll be the first to admit that these new “non-PC” objects do a great job at enabling people to communicate and consume in innovative and interesting ways. That’s not surprising, because they were expressly designed for that purpose. But even their most ardent admirers will not assert that they are as good as PCs at the first two verbs, <strong>create and collaborate</strong>.  And that’s why one should take any reports of the death of the PC with a rather large grain of salt."<br />
<br />
We think there's a syllogism in that last bit.
microsoft  tablet  technology  apps  pc  from delicious
september 2011 by guardiantech
How much does your slow machine cost your company? >> Folding Air Blog
"For example, you're doing TDD, you write a test, do some coding and hit run test but have to wait 30 seconds+ for it to run. This takes long enough to break your flow, you have a quick think about something else and then you realise the test has run and you need to switch you attention back. You might have a quick chat about something else with your pair.<br />
"We know it's hurting our velocity but without numbers it's difficult to convince management of the true costs.<br />
"So what did we do?<br />
"We took a stop watch, kept it with us all day and recorded all the time that where we were waiting for the computer to do something - from opening apps, running builds and tests, searches and refactorings in visual studio - any time at all where the developer had to wait for the machine to work, be it 5 seconds or 5 minutes the stop watch was running. It took quite a lot of discipline. The results were startling."<br />
<br />
Enough to buy a new computer every week.
charlesarthur  technology  from delicious
september 2011 by guardiantech
Information age is changing the way baseball is played >> ESPN
Pointed out to us by John Dowdell of Adobe, the people who make Flash: details how baseball is being changed by the greater access to information about games. Guess how they access it.
charlesarthur  ipad  apple  technology  from delicious
august 2011 by guardiantech
Sport and technology: Howzat! >> The Economist
If you were wondering how Hot Spot and Snickometer worked in cricket...
charlesarthur  cricket  technology  sport  from delicious
august 2011 by guardiantech
H-P's one-year self-destruct plan >> WSJ.com
"Let's say you were given a year to kill Hewlett-Packard. Here's how you do it."<br />
<br />
Witty.
charlesarthur  technology  hp  from delicious
august 2011 by guardiantech
Why Amazon can't make a Kindle in the USA >> Forbes
Intriguing investigation of how the ability to build stuff has leaked away across the Pacific: the two companies given as examples make an interesting contrast.
charlesarthur  technology  business  from delicious
august 2011 by guardiantech
Steve Jobs' post-PC credo >> Fortune Tech
From March; worth reading again in the light of HP's withdrawal from the tablet market.
apple  technology  from delicious
august 2011 by guardiantech
It Just Doesn't Work: why new tech products are increasingly unsatisfying >> Time
"I've been reviewing technology products for 20 years now. I've seen it all, from products that were amazing from the get-go (the first PalmPilot comes to mind) to ones that were downright hazardous (a mouse that caught on fire). But there's never been a time when so much of the new stuff I look at is so very far from being ready for mass consumption. Sometimes it's a tad quirky; sometimes I can't get it to work at all. And when I call the manufacturers for help, they're often well aware of the problems I encountered."<br />
<br />
Can you think of any recently released products for which this might be true?
charlesarthur  technology  from delicious
august 2011 by guardiantech
Steam Hardware & Software Survey
"Steam conducts a monthly survey to collect data about what kinds of computer hardware and software our customers are using. Participation in the survey is optional, and anonymous. The information gathered is incredibly helpful to us as we make decisions about what kinds of technology investments to make and products to offer."<br />
<br />
It's also really interesting to see the cross-section of Steam users.
charlesarthur  games  technology  statistics  from delicious
july 2011 by guardiantech
Are you listening, Steve Jobs? >> BirdAbroad
An Apple store in China? No, fake: "I know, you guys are laughing: an Apple store in Kunming? No one who doesn’t know me personally has ever heard of Kunming before. Kunming is the end of the Earth. It’s all true – but seriously, China warps your mind into believing that anything is possible, if you stay here long enough. When we went back to this store 5 days later and couldn’t find it, having overshot by two blocks, I seriously thought that it had simply been torn down and replaced with a bank in the mean time – hey, it’s China. That could happen.<br />
"You have already guessed the punchline, of course: this was a total Apple store ripoff. A beautiful ripoff – a brilliant one – the best ripoff store we had ever seen (and we see them every day). But some things were just not right: the stairs were poorly made. The walls hadn’t been painted properly.<br />
"Apple never writes “Apple Store” on it’s signs – it just puts up the glowing, iconic fruit."
charlesarthur  apple  technology  china  from delicious
july 2011 by guardiantech
Imogen Heap's tech-infused gloves create music on the fly >> Mashable
"Grammy Award-winning musician Imogen Heap used her time on the TED Global stage on Tuesday in Edinburgh, Scotland to not just perform, but to demonstrate an entirely new way of creating music.<br />
"Using a pair of gloves equipped with wireless mics, an accelerometer, a magnetometer, a gyroscope and a variety of other sensors, Heap created a song on the fly — complete with sounds from a multitude of instruments and effects — using only her body movements and hand gestures."<br />
<br />
We very much want to get her into the Tech Weekly podcast. Think she'll bring her gloves?
technology  music  ted  imogenheap  from delicious
july 2011 by guardiantech
DNA is now DIY: OpenPCR ships worldwide >> OpenPCR
"The price of a traditional PCR machine is around $3,000. So, do people in garages have great PCR machines? Not really. Howabout high school or middle school teachers? Nope. Howabout smaller medical testing labs or labs in India or China? Nope. Even some big bio labs try their luck on eBay. We set out to change that.<br />
"Josh and I prototyped OpenPCR over about 4 months — it was a lot of fun. Last May we unveiled the first OpenPCR prototype to all a bunch of crazy people on Kickstarter, 158 people gave us a total of $12,121. With that we designed and manufactured a repeatable, works-all-the-time device — it took a lot of hard work. Now we’re done and ready to share!"<br />
<br />
PCR is polymerase chain reaction - the method by which you magnify a small sample of DNA. Now, anyone can play.
charlesarthur  technology  dna  from delicious
july 2011 by guardiantech
Seven things human editors do that algorithms don't (yet) >> Harvard Business Review
Eli Pariser (of the Filter Bubble) on stuff that machines still lag at doing when it comes to offering you news.
charlesarthur  technology  journalism  data  media  algorithms  from delicious
july 2011 by guardiantech
MeeGo and the Great Betrayal Myths of tech history >> The Register
Andrew Orlowski: "MeeGo isn't coming back, and to me, looks to have all the makings of a betrayal myth. These are popular with idealistic political groups, usually (but not always) on the Left, for whom Being Right is more important than Winning. I suppose it's been around since Marx's false consciousness (although he never used the phrase); and eventually Being Right becomes the whole point.<br />
"It's not about taking power, or making it work, but demonstrating one's splendid ideological purity. Betrayal myths are also popular with technology enthusiasts too - I know, because I've seen several.<br />
"In this narrative, a bold and brilliant piece of technology is thwarted not because it isn't good enough, or has failed in the marketplace, but because of (delete where applicable) marketing incompetence, or nefarious interference. If that interference comes from Microsoft, so much the better."
charlesarthur  technology  meego  myths  from delicious
june 2011 by guardiantech
Hi-tech crime and sexual partner surveys 'biased' >> BBC News
Microsoft report on "Sex, Lies and Cybercrime Surveys": "In the case of sexual partner surveys, such self-reporting produces totals which suggest that men have had far more female sexual partners than women have had male sexual partners. This, according to the researchers, "is impossible".<br />
"The truth is that in these surveys men over-report partner numbers and women under-report. Plus, said the researchers, some men tell "whopping" lies about their sexual lives and, as a result, vastly inflate the final results.<br />
"The same is true of cyber crime surveys, in that respondents tend to over-report. Also some wildly overestimate the financial loss they suffered or the time it took to resolve problems caused by theft of login details, credit card numbers or other valuable data."
charlesarthur  technology  hacking  from delicious
june 2011 by guardiantech
Apple causes ‘religious’ reaction in brains of fans, say neuroscientists >> Digital Trends
"This suggests that the big tech brands have harnessed, or exploit, the brain areas that have evolved to process religion,; one of the scientists says. A meeting with the Bishop of Buckingham, who reads the Bible using his Apple iPad, appeared to back up this assertion. <br />
<br />
"He pointed out how the Apple store in, for example, Covent Garden has a lot of religious imagery built into it, with its stone floors, abundance of arches, and little altars (on which the products are displayed)."<br />
<br />
This must make Ellen Feiss - remember her? - the equivalent of Mary Magdalene or something.
apple  twitter  technology  perception  from delicious
may 2011 by guardiantech
Microsoft's Odd Couple >> Vanity Fair
Fascinating extract from Paul Allen's book Idea Man about the very early days of Microsoft (as it wasn't yet known): paper tape and 7168 bytes (yes, bytes) of memory. Go code.
charlesarthur  microsoft  business  technology  from delicious
may 2011 by guardiantech

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