— unpredictable thoughts

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Tag "technology"

John Maeda lives at the inter­sec­tion of tech­nol­ogy and art, a place that can get very com­pli­cated. I under­stand that place very well. I’m post­ing this talk because there is so much of it that I relate with.

This talk cre­ates more ques­tions than answers. It is about observ­ing, ques­tion­ing, and exper­i­ment­ing. Cre­at­ing some­thing new that adds to the uni­verse. Some­thing that brings joy. Orga­niz­ing found objects and every­day things to make some­thing totally new.

John Maeda uses imag­i­na­tion to inspire. Walk one day in John Maeda’s shoes. Think, what would John Maeda do with this? Open your mind to new and cre­ative ways to move for­ward in what­ever you do.

BTW, Mr Maeda is no longer at MIT he is now Pres­i­dent of Rhode Island School of Design. Makes me think about how much fun it could be to be back in school. You can find out more about what he is doing there. http://www.risd.edu/president/

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Expe­ri­ence Mobile Mobile from James Théo­phane Jnr on Vimeo.

Yes the phones were pro­grammed with timed ring­tones. Nice video. Nice installation.

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square-signature-screen

Sim­ply, Square is a com­pany that will let you make credit or debit card trans­ac­tions from a smart­phone. Square is a new com­pany who has a founder from another inter­est­ing com­pany, twitter.

Credit and debit card trans­ac­tions take all kinds of devices phys­i­cal and tech­ni­cal includ­ing mer­chant accounts that cost you a bun­dle each month whether you make a trans­ac­tion or not. This is dif­fi­cult for small busi­nesses, sole pro­pri­etors, crafts­peo­ple, and artists.

The story is that “In Feb­ru­ary 2009, Jim McK­elvey wasn’t able to sell a piece of his glass art because he couldn’t accept a credit card as pay­ment” and the next day Square was born.

The whole process seems ter­ri­bly slow for a small trans­ac­tion but the advan­tages of mar­ket­ing offers to fre­quent cus­tomers, an iden­tity ver­i­fi­ca­tion sys­tem, text and e-mail receipts, and trans­ac­tions to the cloud make it a player in this ser­vice space.

I know that I’m ready to try it out.

video from TechCrunch:

square-signature-screen

Sim­ply, Square is a com­pany that will let you make credit or debit card trans­ac­tions from a smart­phone. Square is a new com­pany who has a founder from another inter­est­ing com­pany, twitter.

Credit and debit card trans­ac­tions take all kinds of devices phys­i­cal and tech­ni­cal includ­ing mer­chant accounts that cost you a bun­dle each month whether you make a trans­ac­tion or not. This is dif­fi­cult for small busi­nesses, sole pro­pri­etors, crafts­peo­ple, and artists.

The story is that “In Feb­ru­ary 2009, Jim McK­elvey wasn’t able to sell a piece of his glass art because he couldn’t accept a credit card as pay­ment” and the next day Square was born.

The whole process seems ter­ri­bly slow for a small trans­ac­tion but the advan­tages of mar­ket­ing offers to fre­quent cus­tomers, an iden­tity ver­i­fi­ca­tion sys­tem, text and e-mail receipts, and trans­ac­tions to the cloud make it a player in this ser­vice space.

I know that I’m ready to try it out.

video from TechCrunch:

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b-and-n-nook-press_8

OK. Now we’re talking.

I would buy this device. I know it only does books — a one trick pony. But it let’s you lend your books to oth­ers and it doesn’t look like a Texas Instru­ments cal­cu­la­tor. This device looks like BN hired some prod­uct design­ers and some inter­face design­ers, and a mar­ket­ing crew that knows how to do point-of-purchase.

Barnes and Noble have lis­tened to the crit­i­cism of the Kin­dle and have brought a more sophis­ti­cated and attrac­tive device into the fray.

  • The price is rea­son­able from the start.
  • Design is clean.
  • Multi-touch.
  • Color nav­i­ga­tion panel (for swip­ing through book cov­ers, a la iTunes)
  • You can buy it in a BN store. (many dis­tri­b­u­tion points — one a few blocks from me)
  • You can browse dig­i­tal books
  • You can lend your book to oth­ers on a num­ber of devices
  • It has a mem­ory expan­sion slot
  • It can play MP3’s
  • It can read PDF’s (essential)

Did I men­tion that the design is clean? The device is a bit thicker and weighs more than the Kin­dle. The other impor­tant part is mov­ing away from pro­pri­etary formats.

Lend­ing is good.

I’ll be head­ing down to the Barnes and Noble to check it out. I’ll let you know if I am as impressed when I can touch it.

—–

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” We are not liv­ing through an eco­nomic reces­sion, but a reor­gan­i­sa­tion of our society.”

I believe this quote is true what about you?

” We are not liv­ing through an eco­nomic reces­sion, but a reor­gan­i­sa­tion of our society.”

I believe this quote is true what about you?

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Cover cre­ation from Peter Belanger on Vimeo.

Hav­ing done this kind of work for more years than I’m actu­ally inter­ested in admit­ting to — this video stripped away the intel­lec­tual and con­sid­ered part of the process for me.

It’s sorta depress­ing actually.

All this work for that cover. Hmmm.

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I’ve been look­ing at some cool new themes for Word­Press that use Sand­box. It’s a great envi­ron­ment to get in and use css to con­trol the look and feel.

Prob­lem is that most of the really cool skins that cre­ate thumb­nails and size images can’t cope with pho­tos from flickr. I almost never upload images twice. I refer to their loca­tion usu­ally at flickr. These cool mag­a­zine and cre­ative lay­out require that I upload the image I want to use. This means that blog­ging about an image located else­where requires a down­load and then an upload. I want to be able to linkback to the orig­i­nal instance for sev­eral rea­sons includ­ing giv­ing proper credit for the image.

I don’t want to ask some­one to write a plug-in or sript for this. Any­one have any ideas?

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This is the story of try­ing to get high speed inter­net access where i live in philadelphia.

Let’s start with Ver­i­zon.
Call them up. Give them the address. Can’t find the address in their data­base. Hmmm. We’d like to see if we can get FIOS. Wait­ing on hold. Time passes. The rep can’t find our address. Three peo­ple have lived there before us. Still can’t find our address.

Ok so no Ver­i­zon. If they don’t even know our address that spells bad news for the whole process.

Try Com­cast. (I can’t stand Com­cast. I don’t like their iden­tity, I don’t like their new build­ing, I don’t like that they got a huge tax break to build it. I don’t like their cul­ture.) But, I need high speed inter­net ser­vice. No tele­vi­sion, just internet.

Ok, they know our address. They’ll have some­one out to install tomor­row at 11 am. They’ll bill us. Excellent.

We’re mov­ing and our inter­net ser­vice will be up and run­ning before we move in. This is ter­rific. While unpack­ing we can work from home. Cross that off the list.

Ok, I’m pack­ing and my part­ner is at the new loca­tion to talk to the painters and wait for the Com­cast guy/woman. Believe it or not the guy shows up on time. Ok, lets hook ya up he says.

Bad news.

Cable isn’t run to our new abode. It’s out on the pole but they can’t run it from the pole. New con­struc­tion has to run it under­ground and it’s in our court­yard some­where. His­tory is that Com­cast have been out five other times to try to hook up cable. Some­how our cable has been paved over. We could pay to dig and find it. I don’t think so. We rent.

Now what to do? How can this be. This is Amer­ica we have tele­com com­pe­ti­tion that’s bet­ter for cus­tomers. We get choice.

I won’t rant on how I think tele­com is a pub­lic util­ity. But what am I to think when no one really wants to make an effort to give me service?

I call CTO Phil. Mr. Ives­Dig­i­tal.
He says EVDO.

Hmmm, this is a very inter­est­ing alter­na­tive. This means I can take my net­work con­nect to places that don’t have free wire­less inter­net. This is a REALLY GOOD idea.

Now I can stop freak­ing out.

Mar­garet goes to the Ver­i­zon store. She gets an EVDO card, she buys a plan and she heads to the office. We install the soft­ware and plug in the card. We put in the password.

We’re on the net!

Shar­ing my air­port network.

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The first time that the peo­ple that made the Bernoulli Box became iomega with remov­able dri­ves that were all about YOUR STUFF I thought their was some very savvy think­ing about the desires or con­sumers. Then the CD burner came into being and smashed their suc­cess in the portable stor­age mar­ket­space. Well, It looks like Iomega is return­ing to its old smart self cre­at­ing a very desir­able, very sexy new ego 320 GB hard drive. The reviews I’ve read are very good and the drive is excep­tion­ally good looking.

It reminds me of a flask with some­thing warm inside for when the cold winds blow. Or maybe a cigarette/cigar case — some­thing very per­sonal. The kind of gift you give to some­one you are very fond of, some­thing to inscribe.

This is a prod­uct with a very inter­est­ing emo­tional connection.

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Twitter _ Biz Stone_ A recruiter just called me

The Boston Globe and 140 Sec­onds on Twitter

In case you haven’t seen it yet, Twit­ter is a micro-sharing web­site
where you describe in 140 char­ac­ters or less what you’re up to. You can
send and receive mes­sages via SMS (text mes­sages) on your phone,
through Twitter’s web­site and third-party appli­ca­tions such as Twit­terific.
If you want to talk “with” some­one on Twit­ter, you add @theirusername
to the front of the mes­sage and it shows up in the person’s replies
tab. This was a fea­ture that was added sev­eral months after Twit­ter
first launched in 2006 based upon how peo­ple ended up actu­ally using
the ser­vice. That’s been the con­sis­tent story for Twit­ter — it’s
def­i­nitely evolved beyond “I’m mak­ing an omelet for break­fast” to now
include shar­ing info about late break­ing news, mak­ing plans with a group of cohorts, etc.

BTW, Biz Stone is a co-founder of twitter.

This is a great place to exper­i­ment in the social net­work space. It’s sorta like it use to be in the old days. Sorta free wheel­ing, unex­pected, and fun.

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