happy little danger bomb

28/11/2011

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I’ve been slowly making my way through Walter Isaacson’s Steve Jobs for a couple of weeks now and am currently on the section where Jobs brings in Susan Kare to create the font and icons that would make the Mac what it is today — a computer not just for “figure-it-out-yourself” geeks, but for creative people looking to express themselves. As Isaacson notes, the addition of Kare to Jobs’s Mac team not only made computers accessible to all, it made desktop publishing accessible to all. Over time, anyone who had a Mac began to know and care about fonts, icons and page design. Eventually, the Mac, paired with the laser printer, took users away from the mimeograph and into the realm of self publishing. My father, for instance, owned a restaurant for a time and used the family Mac to create a monthly newsletter for his best customers — a differentiator that kept them coming back.

Kare’s icons — and particular the bomb icon above — are what I think of when I think of the Mac. To this day, the bomb conjures up mixed feelings of dread, hope and challenge. The bomb only appeared when the worst of the worst happened. When I backed the Mac into a corner that it just couldn’t get out of, it would throw up the bomb warning and let me know it was time to start over. After a reboot, I would stare are the watch tick, tick, ticking by and hope to see the happy Mac icon. When I did, I knew all was right with the world. If I saw the bomb again, I knew it as time to dig in for a challenge — fix the bugger, or take it to the shop.

Kare’s icons didn’t just make the Mac more useable, they brought real emotion to computing. They created visceral feelings of joy, suspense and even fear. In turn, these feelings helped users form a tight, emotional bond with their computers and their work that made them want to keep working — and keep buying. A lot of non-Mac users like to slag Mac users as “Fanboys” or members of a cult because of their devotion to the Mac. What they don’t get is that the obsessive, smart and devoted work put in by people like Kare is why we love our Macs. We love them because they are designed with love and devotion in mind. We love them because of their happy little danger bombs.

For more on Kare, including excerpts from her sketchbook from the first Mac icon designs, read Steve Silberman’s excellent post at NeuroTribes. Also, be sure to check out Kare’s own site, where she is selling a book of her work as well as signed prints.

Image: Bomb on  Red, by Susan Kare.

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four keys to apple’s success

24/11/2011

Focus— “It means saying no, not saying yes. We do very few things at Apple. We are $100bn in revenue with very few products. There are only so many grade A players. If you spread yourself out over too many things, none of them will be great.”

Greg Joswiak, part of the product marketing team for iPod, iPhone and iOS, speaking at Cambridge University on the four keys to Apple’s success. They are: Focus, Simplicity, Courage, Best.

(Via The Wall Street Journal: Four Keys to Apple’s Success.)

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flash is the walking dead

10/11/2011

It’s no secret that Flash has been stumbling around for a while, reeling from a sucking zombie bite as the rest of the tech industry looks on in either horror or bemusement, depending on their love and dependence on the third-party plug-in. Tech pndits stand in a circle waiting for the zombie poison to reach its brain and take full effect. And that’s when they’ll pounce and simply club it to death.

This week, Flash finally stopped stumbling, hit the floor, and turned zombie. Very soon, the final clubs will descend.

I’ve actually felt this way for a long time, even as I worked with designers to create interactive graphics in Flash. The technology is still the most useful and easiest way to get interactive content onto the web. I’m sure lots of people thought the horse was easier to use than the Model T back in the day as well. It certainly was less expensive and easier to learn — all excuses Flash developers are using right now on Adobe’s blog to defend the walking dead.

Yes, Flash is “easier” than HTML5 and in some cases for the PC it’s more powerful. But the problem with Flash has always been that it’s a parasite — a third party forced to be hosted by the native application. As native technology developed in the browser through HTML and CSS, Flash was destined to fail. Anyone who creates on the web should have known that, even as they created in Flash. I used (and in some cases will continue to use) Flash knowing that what I create will never see the mobile browser, and that’s fine in some cases. But wishing and hoping for Flash on mobile was foolish and out of touch with reality.

mobile is king
Flash’s Zombie status really hit me earlier this week while in meetings with a web developer to discuss a massive digital strategy rethink and redesign. We were discussing the obvious need for a seamless experience between the website on the PC and on the mobile device (phone or tablet) regardless of who makes what device. No one wants a banner saying, “click here to visit our mobile site,” or an obvious redirect, or anything silly — just a website built for a browser no matter where it lives. For anyone developing sites now, this is simply best practice and if this is best practice, that means no Flash — especially in the wake of yesterday’s announcement.

don’t talk to me about air
Adobe’s statement basically says that Flash will be used for two things:

  1. High-end production on the PC — Premium video and advanced games.
  2. Producing applications in Adobe Air that can be ported to multiple mobile devices.

I’m interested to see how this works out for them. Premium video is a short-term play. Yes, Flash will probably rule in this space for a bit, but the lack of mobile support will doom them here too. Also, HTML 5 will catch up in this space ,and probably pretty quickly as developers abandon Flash for good and start building their skills in modern web development. I can see games being a longer-term play for Flash, but that’s a pretty niche area.

Turning Flash into a development platform for applications is probably the longest-term play there is. There is plenty of demand for cheap, low-end apps that do the job. This demand will continue to grow as smartphones continue their march into everyone’s hands.

But don’t talk to me about Adobe Air for the desktop. Adobe Air is absolute crap. It is no more an application platform than Fluid. All Adobe Air does is take the web experience, pull it our of the browser and make the text and graphics look wonky and blown out. I have never seen an Adobe Air product that didn’t look like absolute shit and I challenge anyone out there to show me one.

long live adobe
Don’t take all of this ragging on Flash as a slight against Adobe. I love Adobe. Adobe makes the best, most powerful design tools around. Without Adobe, the rich, visual Internet experience we have today wouldn’t exist. The problem is that in some respects Adobe has become synonymous with Flash — which should never have been the case. Adobe makes great products for creative professionals and if they remain true to their commitment to bring those tools to the cloud and democratize them — as they have with Photoshop Express — so they’ll be useable for broader audiences, they’ll continue to make our world a more beautiful place.

Adobe also has to stay true to their commitment to help speed the transition to HTML5. Without Adobe’s help, many web developers and other creative will be left behind as we march toward the new standard. In their blog post announcing the death of Flash mobile, Adobe says, “we will design new features in Flash for a smooth transition to HTML5 as the standards evolve so developers can confidently invest knowing their skills will continue to be leveraged.”

Sticking to that philosophy will be crucial to the future of Adobe and in many ways it will be crucial to the survival of a thriving and rich Internet experience.

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twelvesouth plugbug is simple genius for macbooks

8/11/2011

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(Found Via UncratePlugBug.)

The PlugBug from Apple accessory shop TwelveSouth is simple, yet ingenious. It snaps onto the standard MaBook power adaptor and gives you an extra USB port to charge up your iPad or iPhone leaving the USBs on the MacBook free for external drives or other devices. Simple genius.

 

 

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bring your own device to work: a happy worker is a productive worker

26/09/2011

Via The New York Times: Workers’ Own Cellphones and iPads Find a Role at the Office

You shouldn’t reject things that make employees more productive, and if those things happen to be consumer technologies, so be it,” said Ted Schadler, an analyst with Forrester Research.

Corporate I.T. departments often resist allowing consumer technology on their networks because of security concerns. Adding a hodgepodge of devices and services also complicates their job.

But I.T. departments are gradually warming to the idea simply because their bosses left them little choice. The I.T. staff may grieve for their lost power, but they do it.

“They’re over the denial and anger stage, and now they are in the acceptance and ‘How can we help?’ stage,” said Mr. Schadler, who co-wrote the book “Empowered,” which addresses consumer technology in the workplace. “What broke the camel’s back was the iPad, because executives brought it into the company and said ‘Hey, you’ve got to support this.’

At its heart, the “Bring Your Own Device” to work philosophy is about productivity. Its about allowing workers to choose the device that works for them so they will want to use it. In my own experience, once my job allowed me to switch from a PC to a Mac, I found I wanted to use it after hours. Sure, that sometimes meant surfing the web and blogging, but it also meant checking email, catching up on an overdue assignment and working on passion projects that may or may not pan out.

Even when I’m not doing something “work related” on my computer I’m often checking out new websites for design or content ideas, reading TechCrunch, or otherwise building my knowledge of how the digital world works — all of which I bring back to my job and increases the company’s knowledge base.

So make no mistake about it, bring your own device to work is not just about giving employees choice so they are happy. It’s about giving employees choice so they are happy and always working.

Hat tip: Daring Fireball

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america is fucked for “jobs,” get used to it

12/09/2011

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Via The iPhone And US Unemployment – The Dish By Andrew Sullivan:

As China and India develop even faster, I see no way American skilled workers can truly compete without CEOs hurting their own shareholders. The prospect of a continued corporate profit boom, higher and higher economic and social inequality and persistently high unemployment is real and probably inevitable, absent brutal protectionism.

Andrew Sullivan offers a sobering look at where the US economy is headed based on two icons of gizmodatry: The iPhone and The Kindle. Both were invented here in the USA, but are manufactured in China. Sullivan notes that the iPhone could not be made in the USA without Apple losing 15 percent of its profit. And the technology to make the Kindle? It doesn’t even exist in the US. There’s literally now where else to make it.

However, I think Sullivan’s point above — that faster development in India and China will increase the skilled jobs drain to those countries needs to be fleshed out a bit more. As the US has developed we’ve shipped these jobs overseas so that technology is invented here and made somewhere else. As China and India develop, the same will happen there. Eventually, Chinese and Indian entrepreneurs will build the next must-have product, or disruptive social network. As they do, the jobs will continue to flow downhill to other developing economies — probably in Asia Pacific and Africa.

Perhaps, eventually the unemployment situation here will get so exacerbated that American workers will be forced to accept decreased wages and standards of living in order to have jobs. We bristle at the conditions at Chinese manufacturing giants like Foxconn, but is that where we need to go if we want manufacturing jobs? Probably yes, eventually.

The bald truth is that the world is experiencing a major economic shift that will likely be more disruptive to our economy, culture and environment than the industrial revolution.

Unfortunately, no one in power, or seeking power, has been honest with the American public about this fact. Nobody is leveling with the American people that we are fucked for “jobs” and there’s no going back. When politicians talk about “jobs” they’re generally talking about manufacturing and other blue collar jobs that pay enough to afford workers a middle class lifestyle and a chance to provide their children with a better shot at the future through education. This is the fundamental narrative the US economy and “the American Dream” are built on. Unfortunately, those days are over and they’re never coming back.

So let’s be honest with ourselves: The days of the noble blue collar worker are over, ok? They’re legend — captured in the time capsule of Bruce Springsteen songs. They are FUCKING OVER and they are never coming back.

No amount of stimulus or green jobs, or infrastructure revitalization, or whatever the hell else you want to trot out is going to change that. You’re talking bandaids on a shotgun wound. It’s over. The days when you could get a high school education and some job training, join the union and earn enough to be middle class and send your kids to college? FUCKING OVER. They’re not coming back.

Today, if you want to be middle class, you need a college degree, at the very least, and you probably need some kind of graduate degree. Which in turn means you need to go into hock to make a decent salary. It’s a trap that is going to mean our generation grows old with a lower standard of living then our parents. But, when we’re old and gray we can tell everyone how we were the first generation of the Technology Revolution and we built the new world order. We can be bigger and just as cloying as The Greatest Generation.

The question is what kind of world are we going to build? Are we going to build a world based on new technology, where American workers are knowledge workers and the “new middle class” are people who can run sysadmin on a bunch of servers, run a content management system, write advertising copy, run an efficient retail operation, or install a home energy production system? Are we going to create a world where homes and businesses are energy self-sufficient and provide abundant energy to our cars, appliances and gadgets without the need for a crappy grid or burning quickly-depleting, earth-killing fossil fuels? Are we going to build a future where not having a college degree (or some future equivalent) makes you a pariah in the same way that not having a high school degree does now? And, importantly, are we going to create a system that ensures everyone has a chance to earn that college degree (or future equivalent)? Are we going to create a future where our dwindling manufacturing plants seem as quaint and old-world as the old New England textile mills do today? Are we going to create a future where broadband access is considered a utility as ubiquitous and necessary as electricity and anyone can start a company from their kitchen table?

Or, are we going to try to hold onto our old way of life and limp along, polluting our planet and dealing with increasingly long power outages due to increasingly strong natural disasters? Are we going to simply accept an ever-increasing divide between the haves and have nots? Are we going to build Foxconn-style plants here in order to provide jobs — under any circumstances — to an increasingly irrelevant work force? Are we going to continue to let our education system slide into disarray and pretend everything is just fine because a teacher can get kids to memorize answers on a standardized test? Are we going to say it’s acceptable that some areas of the country will never get access to the Internet revolution?

To get the former, we need to be honest about the massive changes we are experiencing right now and be honest about the sacrifices we need to make now in order to prepare for a better future. To get the former, we need to invest in infrastructure, education and new energy production — not because it’s going to “create jobs” now, but because it’s going to mean avoiding a dystopian future.

To get the latter, we have to simply keep the blinders on, keep fooling ourselves into believing that we can turn this around with a little old-fashioned American elbow grease and stimulus. To get the latter, we should just keep telling ourselves nothing has changed when in reality, everything has changed.

(Photo: Abandoned marble factory (10) by Flickr user Joelk75. Used under a Creative Commons License.)

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the new ipad ad that’s so good it will make you weep

18/06/2011

Via Business Insider: Here’s The New iPad Ad:
“Unlike many tech companies, Apple understands that consumers don’t buy “technology.” They buy products that makes their lives easier and better. They buy products that look beautiful, are simple to figure out how to use, and then “just work.” They buy products they love.”

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friday lost and found: the coming classico edition

10/06/2011

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(A quick Editor’s Note: This column used to be called “Hot Friday Link Action.” The title was meant to be a cheeky dig at blog headlines that are all tricked out for SEO. I’ve changed the name to “Friday Lost and Found,” because frankly I think it sounds cooler and less douche-y. Also, I think most people weren’t getting the joke and just thought I was lame. So, from here on out we have “Friday Lost and Found.”)

Just in time for Gold Cup, we start today with a cool collaboration between soccer-t-shirts-for-hipsters clothier Bumpy Pitch and Nike on a set of US and Mexico rivalry t-shirts. The shirts take the design of the current US National team jersey and — for the US — add in some Mexico-digging elements, like an Eagle crushing an El Tri pendant and squeezing a prickly pear. The Mexican version comes in black with green detailing and shows a pink Eagle (there’s a reason its pink, but you need to read the post) ripping apart a US crest and eating the Don’t Tread on Me snake. Since the tea-baggers have co-opted the DOTM logo, I don’t mind that last bit at all.

Speaking of the hoped-for US v Mexico Gold Cup final, five Mexican players, including starting Guillermo Ochoa and defender Francisco Rodriguez, have been suspended from the Cup for doping. Unfortunately Chicharito was not one of them.

***
Facebook just acquired some serious design chops, buying design firm Sofa. Sofa will be familiar to most Mac users as the designers of icons for AppZapper, Transmission, Awaken, Coverflow and others. They’ve also done icon design for Nike, Mozilla and Tom Tom and created apps for Mac including Kaleidoscope and Versions. It’s unclear what the Sofa team will be charged with at Facebook, but they are moving from Amsterdam to Palo Alto. What is clear is that Facebook may be getting a lot prettier in the coming months and years.

***
Posterous has just rolled out an API opening the platform to third party developers
. The new API will “allow developers and others to build upon the Posterous platform, including the ability to create users and sites on one’s own domain.” What I really love about this is that Posterous has chosen a non-profit partner, Oxfam, to be the first showcase user of the API. Oxfam will be hosting a network of Posterous blogs as part of their new Grow campaign — a campaign aimed at raising awareness around food shortages around the world.

***
TEDxMidAtlantic, or as I like to call it, “TED for the hopelessly uncool and unhip,” has been scheduled for October 29 in Washington, DC
. MidAtlantic is one of the more developed TEDx events out there and the 2010 version pulled in some pretty heavy hitter. The conference moves to DC from backwater Baltimore this year, so I’m sure it will be even better.

Speaking of TED, Chris Anderson has had enough of emails and he’s crowd-sourcing an email charter to help fix it. Do you have a particular email annoyance? Let Chris know.

***
Finally today, Steve Jobs is really taking this whole James Bond villain persona a bit too far. The Apple head showed up at a Cupertino City Council meeting the other day to pitch plans for a new Apple campus that literally looks like a damn spaceship landed in the middle of Silicon Valley. The ringed campus literally doesn’t include a single piece of straight glass. Plans include a central courtyard, 6,000 trees and a site specific natural gas power plant. Apple will only use energy from the California grid for backup and to power their giant laser.

(Image from The Original Winger.)

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link: icloud officially official (for realz)

31/05/2011

Official: iOS 5, OS X Lion, and iCloud To Be Announced Next Week At WWDC (ViaTechCrunch)
TechCrunch and many others reprint the Apple press release touting the Steve Jobs keynote on June 6. Announcements will include info on OSX Lion, iOS 5 and “iCloud®, Apple’s upcoming cloud services offering.”

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will hype drive adoption of HTML5?

20/05/2011

Hype, which sells for $29.99, uses WebKit to render pages and has been crafted so that anyone comfortable with using Keynote or PowerPoint can start building animations in HTML5, no code required.

“It’s pretty clear that HTML5 is the future of the web,” says Deutsch. “It will, of course, run not only on desktop machines but also runs really well on any modern smartphone or tablet like the iPad. The problem is that there are no good designer apps for creating animated HTML5 like there are for Flash.”

via Mashable: Skip Flash, Build Animations in HTML5 With Hype

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