digibrown » web.software.design » Featured http://digibrown.com agile creative functional & fun software design Tue, 01 Dec 2020 08:09:01 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.1.3 Snow monkey king http://digibrown.com/2012/01/snow-monkey-king/ http://digibrown.com/2012/01/snow-monkey-king/#comments Tue, 03 Jan 2012 22:30:03 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/2012/02/snow-monkey-king/

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The Snow Monkeys of Jigokudani near Shiga Kogen, Nagano.

After two kilometers of very snowy forest trail we came upon this amazing scene.

It’s good to be the king, but judging by the missing finger he’s had to fight for the right to sit in the sauna and been attended to by the gang.

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Japanese menus aren’t for the fussy eater http://digibrown.com/2012/01/japanese-menus-arent-for-the-fussy-eater/ http://digibrown.com/2012/01/japanese-menus-arent-for-the-fussy-eater/#comments Tue, 03 Jan 2012 00:55:59 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/2012/01/japanese-menus-arent-for-the-fussy-eater/

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Organic buildings http://digibrown.com/2011/12/hong-organic-buildings/ http://digibrown.com/2011/12/hong-organic-buildings/#comments Wed, 28 Dec 2011 00:00:01 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/2011/12/hong-organic-buildings/

Hong Kong buildings remind of some type of coral-like organic life form.

A good example of the ‘Porosity’ of Asian city living…

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Apple’s web-app directory has gone very quiet http://digibrown.com/2011/11/apple-not-updating-webapp-directory/ http://digibrown.com/2011/11/apple-not-updating-webapp-directory/#comments Mon, 28 Nov 2011 02:12:14 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=694

Original post from April 18, updated for the 1 year anniversary of apple web-apps going dark!

Being a developer of several web-apps for both pc and mobile phones, I read with interest way back in March the brouhaha regarding whether Apple had intentionally hamstrung web-apps performance on the iPhone by preventing their use of its brand shiny new Nitro javascript engine.

The question that remains is whether this is an oversight on the part of Apple, or whether it is quietly intentional. With the company’s stand against Flash, an open standard of HTML5 should be its next logical thing to support. But if it doesn’t fix the problem in future versions of iOS, that leads a hefty credence to the rumor mill.

The debate primarily centred around whether with their update to Safari in iOS 4.3 Apple had purposely excluded web-apps for security reasons (JIT’s ability to mark memory pages in RAM as executable) or something more nefarious, such as perhaps feeling threatened by the rise of web-apps and a potential hit on the native app-store revenue….that debate rages on.

As I mentioned, I develop a number of websites with web-app versions customised to run on mobile phones. One of these apps is SwipeStudy (a flashcard study tool) which I submitted to the Apple web-app library, which is (or perhaps was) a very useful and thoughtful site provided by Apple for developers to showcase their (typically freeware) web-apps. However on my last update I mistakenly entered the web address without the http:// prefix (my mistake I admit) which causes the link to wander off to some internal Apple error page…doh!

I have been trying to contact apple to rectify this link, but started to suspect and now after the passing months am pretty sure that they are no longer maintaining this site. In fact the last update to was 3rd Dec 2010, over 4 months ago a year ago!

So I conclude with the question that if Apple are playing with a fair hand with respect to web-apps on iOS, why would they stop updating this site. I guess they may just be too busy dealing with their undoubted many successes, or could they see the writing on the wall with a business model based on app-store revenue when the whole app-ecosphere is converging on html5?

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Google Developer Day and My presentation @Creative sandbox http://digibrown.com/2011/11/google-developer-day-and-creative-sandbox/ http://digibrown.com/2011/11/google-developer-day-and-creative-sandbox/#comments Tue, 08 Nov 2011 08:18:59 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/2011/11/google-developer-day-and-creative-sandbox/

So I was off to Darling Harbour for the annual Geek-fest that is #gdd11, and was pretty impressed with the quality of the lunch boxes…the talks weren’t bad either. Actually the highlights were Timothy Jordan & Julia Ferraioli’s presentation on Using the Google+ APIs and also Eric Bidelman’s Bleeding Edge HTML5. I even managed to incorporate some new HTML5 features into SwipeStudy during the presentations!

Later in the evening Presented SwipeStudy at Google Creative Sandbox 2011, Carriageworks Sydney.
, a great night despite the stormy weather, I was almost electrocuted on the monorail trying to get there…

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Thanks to all you marketing types who gave me great feedback on swipestudy and it’s potential uses in training and education.

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Hong Kong UX http://digibrown.com/2011/09/hong-kong-ux/ http://digibrown.com/2011/09/hong-kong-ux/#comments Tue, 27 Sep 2011 10:45:33 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/2011/09/hong-kong-ux/

This Hong Kong street-scene snapped while rolling along up the soho escalator looks like a crazy UX drop down menu design

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Why buzzwords like HTML5 are useful http://digibrown.com/2011/02/why-buzzwords-like-html5-are-useful/ http://digibrown.com/2011/02/why-buzzwords-like-html5-are-useful/#comments Wed, 02 Feb 2011 02:59:34 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=668

But I think there’s actually a very good reason why we should, in fact, embrace the term “HTML5” as an overarching buzzword for this latest round of web standards and specifications. Our industry has proven on several occasions that we don’t get excited about new, interesting, and useful technologies and concepts until such a buzzword is in place.

“AJAX,” of course, is the canonical example of this. DOM scripting, XMLHttpRequest, and dynamic Javascript all existed long before the term “AJAX”. But it wasn’t until the clever term was coined that anyone really cared. As soon as we had a single, simple word we could all get behind, Javascript really took off. A proliferation of frameworks and libraries hit the scene, and suddenly we were all building dynamic web projects. And the term was misused. Badly. Left and right. Much of the great code being written didn’t use XML. Much of it wasn’t asynchronous. But most of it was pretty great, and it was usually called “AJAX” wether it really was or not. And pedants went crazy. They argued about the semantics of the term “AJAX” until they were blue in the face. But in the end, no one would argue that “AJAX” wasn’t a good thing for our industry. Without that term, we wouldn’t be where we are today.

And it’s not just AJAX. If you want other examples, look no further then “Web 2.0” and “Microformats.” “HTML5” is today’s “AJAX.” Just as with “AJAX,” people are misusing the term all over the web. But it wasn’t until influential people and companies (notably Apple) started misusing the term that web developers at large (myself included) starting taking this new collection of web standards, specifications, and best practices seriously, as something that might be useful before 2022.

Sometimes we just need a word to rally behind. And put in job descriptions. And claim we “support” (another word that is mostly meaningless). It’s a language thing and a human psychology thing.

So be pedantic about the semantics of “HTML5” if you want, but don’t be surprised if no one really listens. This is something most people can understand and get behind. This, on the other hand, is not.

http://jeffcroft.com/blog/2010/aug/02/term-html5/

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Wikileaks Cablegate on HRH Prince Andrew http://digibrown.com/2010/11/wikileaks-cablegate-on-hrh-prince-andrew/ http://digibrown.com/2010/11/wikileaks-cablegate-on-hrh-prince-andrew/#comments Tue, 30 Nov 2010 05:39:17 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=660
"The crowd practically clapped. He then capped this off with a zinger: castigating “our stupid (sic) British and American governments which plan at best for ten years whereas people in this part of the world plan for centuries.” There were calls of “hear, hear” in the private brunch hall. Unfortunately for the assembled British subjects, their cherished Prince was now late to the Prime Minister’s. He regretfully tore himself away from them and they from him."]]>

According to a dispatch in the Cablegate Wikileaks treasure trove, American Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan Tatiana Gfoeller attended a two-hour brunch to brief HRH Prince Andrew Duke of York ahead of his meetings with the Kyrgyz Prime Minister. Much of the banter is actually quite amusing and a rare peek into the attitudes of the British royal family.

2. (C) British Ambassador to the Kyrgyz Republic Paul Brummell invited the Ambassador to participate in briefing His Royal Highness Prince Andrew, the Duke of York, ahead of his October 28 meetings with Kyrgyz Prime Minister Igor Chudinov and other high-level officials. The Prince was in Kyrgyzstan to promote British economic interests. Originally scheduled to last an hour over brunch, the briefing ended up lasting two hours, thanks to the super-engaged Prince’s pointed questions. The Ambassador was the only participant who was not a British subject or linked to the Commonwealth. The absence of her French and German colleagues was notable; they were apparently not invited despite being fellow members of the European Union. Others included major British investors in Kyrgyzstan and the Canadian operator of the Kumtor mine.

“ALL OF THIS SOUNDS EXACTLY LIKE FRANCE”
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¶5. (C) After having half-heartedly danced around the topic for a bit, only mentioning “personal interests” in pointed fashion, the business representatives then plunged into describing what they see as the appallingly high state of corruption in the Kyrgyz economy. While claiming that all of them never participated in it and never gave out bribes, one representative of a middle-sized company stated that “It is sometimes an awful temptation.” In an astonishing display of candor in a public hotel where the brunch was taking place, all of the businessmen then chorused that nothing gets done in Kyrgyzstan if President Bakiyev’s son Maxim does not get “his cut.” Prince Andrew took up the topic with gusto, saying that he keeps hearing Maxim’s name “over and over again” whenever he discusses doing business in this country. Emboldened, one businessman said that doing business here is “like doing business in the Yukon” in the nineteenth century, i.e. only those willing to participate in local corrupt practices are able to make any money. His colleagues all heartily agreed, with one pointing out that “nothing ever changes here. Before all you heard was Akayev’s son’s name. Now it’s Bakiyev’s son’s name.” At this point the Duke of York laughed uproariously, saying that: “All of this sounds exactly like France.”

RUDE LANGUAGE A LA BRITISH
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¶13. (C) The brunch had already lasted almost twice its allotted time, but the Prince looked like he was just getting started. Having exhausted the topic of Kyrgyzstan, he turned to the general issue of promoting British economic interests abroad. He railed at British anti-corruption investigators, who had had the “idiocy” of almost scuttling the Al-Yamama deal with Saudi Arabia. (NOTE: The Duke was referencing an investigation, subsequently closed, into alleged kickbacks a senior Saudi royal had received in exchange for the multi-year, lucrative BAE Systems contract to provide equipment and training to Saudi security forces. END NOTE.) His mother’s subjects seated around the table roared their approval. He then went on to “these (expletive) journalists, especially from the National Guardian, who poke their noses everywhere” and (presumably) make it harder for British businessmen to do business. The crowd practically clapped. He then capped this off with a zinger: castigating “our stupid (sic) British and American governments which plan at best for ten years whereas people in this part of the world plan for centuries.” There were calls of “hear, hear” in the private brunch hall. Unfortunately for the assembled British subjects, their cherished Prince was now late to the Prime Minister’s. He regretfully tore himself away from them and they from him. On the way out, one of them confided to the Ambassador: “What a wonderful representative for the British people! We could not be prouder of our royal family!”

¶14. (C) COMMENT: Prince Andrew reached out to the Ambassador with cordiality and respect, evidently valuing her insights. However, he reacted with almost neuralgic patriotism whenever any comparison between the United States and United Kingdom came up. For example, one British businessman noted that despite the “overwhelming might of the American economy compared to ours” the amount of American and British investment in Kyrgyzstan was similar. Snapped the Duke: “No surprise there. The Americans don’t understand geography. Never have. In the U.K., we have the best geography teachers in the world!” END COMMENT.

cablegate.wikileaks.org

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Social Media; doing good vs making money http://digibrown.com/2010/11/social_media_doing_good_vs_making_money/ http://digibrown.com/2010/11/social_media_doing_good_vs_making_money/#comments Sun, 21 Nov 2010 22:29:04 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=645

Two very different videos on Social Media…one inspiring, one impressive yet slightly scary…


Eric Schmidt, Alec Ross & Jared Cohen on 21st Century Statecraft. Google is increasingly getting involved in geo-politics.


Web 2.0 Summit 2010: Mark Zuckerberg, “A Conversation with Mark Zuckerberg” …the man is a social media machine!

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Very funny/true from Charlie Brooker: Google Instant is trying to kill me http://digibrown.com/2010/09/very-funnytrue-from-charlie-brooker-google-instant-is-trying-to-kill-me/ http://digibrown.com/2010/09/very-funnytrue-from-charlie-brooker-google-instant-is-trying-to-kill-me/#comments Wed, 15 Sep 2010 02:24:28 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=635

Last week I realised the internet wants to kill me. I was trying to write a script in a small room with nothing but a laptop for company. Perfect conditions for quiet contemplation – but thanks to the accompanying net connection, I may as well have been sharing the space with a 200-piece marching band.


I’m starting to feel like an unwitting test subject in a global experiment conducted by Google, in which it attempts to discover how much raw information it can inject directly into my hippocampus before I crumple to the floor and start fitting uncontrollably.

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Author Nicholas Carr wrote a controversial post on hyperlinks in which he argued that links were a distraction for readers http://digibrown.com/2010/09/author-nicholas-carr-wrote-a-controversial-post-on-hyperlinks-in-which-he-argued-that-links-were-a-distraction-for-readers/ http://digibrown.com/2010/09/author-nicholas-carr-wrote-a-controversial-post-on-hyperlinks-in-which-he-argued-that-links-were-a-distraction-for-readers/#comments Tue, 07 Sep 2010 00:59:40 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=631 http://digibrown.com/2010/09/author-nicholas-carr-wrote-a-controversial-post-on-hyperlinks-in-which-he-argued-that-links-were-a-distraction-for-readers/feed/ 0 Running Extra Mile Sets the Human Apart http://digibrown.com/2010/08/running-extra-mile-sets-the-human-apart/ http://digibrown.com/2010/08/running-extra-mile-sets-the-human-apart/#comments Mon, 09 Aug 2010 09:03:29 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=615

While slogging my way to Bondi beach yesterday in the annual city to surf amongst the world-record 80,000 strong throng I was reminded of this article on how the ability to run long-distance had a big influence on the development of the human form and brain. At least it helped keep my mind off the pain…

Endurance running, unique to humans among primates and uncommon in all mammals other than dogs, horses and hyenas, apparently evolved at least two million years ago and probably let human ancestors hunt and scavenge over great distances. That was probably decisive in the pursuit of high-protein food for development of large brains.

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iphone irrationality http://digibrown.com/2010/07/iphone-vs-htc/ http://digibrown.com/2010/07/iphone-vs-htc/#comments Thu, 29 Jul 2010 08:14:01 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=563
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Planning for “long-fuse, big bang problems” in an age of uncertainty. http://digibrown.com/2010/07/planning-for-long-fuse-big-bang-problems-in-an-age-of-uncertainty/ http://digibrown.com/2010/07/planning-for-long-fuse-big-bang-problems-in-an-age-of-uncertainty/#comments Wed, 28 Jul 2010 07:25:02 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=561

Scenario planning derives from the observation that, given the impossibility of knowing precisely how the future will play out, a good decision or strategy to adopt is one that plays out well across several possible futures. To find that “robust” strategy, scenarios are created in plural, such that each scenario diverges markedly from the others. These sets of scenarios are, essentially, specially constructed stories about the future, each one modeling a distinct, plausible world in which we might someday have to live and work.

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Power in the Networked Century http://digibrown.com/2010/07/power-in-the-networked-century/ http://digibrown.com/2010/07/power-in-the-networked-century/#comments Mon, 26 Jul 2010 06:59:21 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=534

Interesting thoughts on hierarchies vs networks in this influential paper by Anne-Marie Slaughter, America’s Edge: Power in the Networked Century.

In this world, the measure of power is connectedness. Almost 30 years ago, the psychologist Carol Gilligan wrote about differences between the genders in their modes of thinking. She observed that men tend to see the world as made up of hierarchies of power and seek to get to the top, whereas women tend to see the world as containing webs of relationships and seek to move to the center. Gilligan’s observations capture the differences between the twentieth-century and the twenty-first-century worlds.

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Social Networks – a Darwinian Perspective. http://digibrown.com/2010/07/social-networks-%e2%80%93-a-perspective/ http://digibrown.com/2010/07/social-networks-%e2%80%93-a-perspective/#comments Sun, 25 Jul 2010 04:48:24 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=530 The net in all its forms, wired or wireless, fixed or mobile has become the greatest contributor to the spread of memes the world has ever seen. Never have so many people been able to share so many ideas or concentrate their intelligence so rapidly.]]> ]]> http://digibrown.com/2010/07/social-networks-%e2%80%93-a-perspective/feed/ 0 Digital Diplomacy http://digibrown.com/2010/07/digital-diplomacy-looks-like-the-u-s-state-department-is-getting-it/ http://digibrown.com/2010/07/digital-diplomacy-looks-like-the-u-s-state-department-is-getting-it/#comments Wed, 21 Jul 2010 06:12:19 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=496 The underpinning philosophy of 21st-century statecraft is that the networked world 'exists above the state, below the state and through the state']]> ]]> http://digibrown.com/2010/07/digital-diplomacy-looks-like-the-u-s-state-department-is-getting-it/feed/ 0 Christopher Hitchens on the Grape and the Grain http://digibrown.com/2010/06/christopher-hitchens-on-the-grape-and-the-grain/ http://digibrown.com/2010/06/christopher-hitchens-on-the-grape-and-the-grain/#comments Wed, 30 Jun 2010 02:58:30 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=486 Alcohol makes other people less tedious, and food less bland, and can help provide what the Greeks called entheos, or the slight buzz of inspiration when reading or writing. The only worthwhile miracle in the New Testament—​the transmutation of water into wine during the wedding at Cana—​is a tribute to the persistence of Hellenism in an otherwise austere Judaea.]]> Alcohol makes other people less tedious, and food less bland, and can help provide what the Greeks called entheos, or the slight buzz of inspiration when reading or writing. The only worthwhile miracle in the New Testament—​the transmutation of water into wine during the wedding at Cana—​is a tribute to the persistence of Hellenism in an otherwise austere Judaea.]]> http://digibrown.com/2010/06/christopher-hitchens-on-the-grape-and-the-grain/feed/ 0 What the internet is doing to our minds http://digibrown.com/2010/06/what-the-internet-is-doing-to-our-minds/ http://digibrown.com/2010/06/what-the-internet-is-doing-to-our-minds/#comments Sun, 06 Jun 2010 04:03:31 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=466 HAL in “2001: A Space Odyssey” the machine is being dismantled, its wires unplugged: “My mind is going,” HAL says. “I can feel it.”
For Carr, the analogy is obvious: The modern mind is like the fictional computer. “I can feel it too,” he writes. “Over the last few years, I’ve had an uncomfortable sense that someone, or something, has been tinkering with my brain, remapping the neural circuitry, reprogramming the memory.” ]]>
HAL in “2001: A Space Odyssey” the machine is being dismantled, its wires unplugged: “My mind is going,” HAL says. “I can feel it.”
For Carr, the analogy is obvious: The modern mind is like the fictional computer. “I can feel it too,” he writes. “Over the last few years, I’ve had an uncomfortable sense that someone, or something, has been tinkering with my brain, remapping the neural circuitry, reprogramming the memory.” ]]>
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I Think Facebook Just Seized Control Of The Internet http://digibrown.com/2010/04/i-think-facebook-just-seized-control-of-the-internet/ http://digibrown.com/2010/04/i-think-facebook-just-seized-control-of-the-internet/#comments Thu, 22 Apr 2010 00:38:26 +0000 anubis2020 http://digibrown.com/?p=447 Their new three social plugins, Open Graph, and Open Graph API, make Facebook’s intentions very clear: they want to be the fabric of the web.]]>

The opening keynote at Facebook’s f8 conference today in San Francisco was short and sweet. But don’t let that fool you. It contained some huge announcements pertaining to how the service will interact with the broader web going forward. The three big ones: social plugins, Open Graph, and Open Graph API, make Facebook’s intentions very clear: they want to be the fabric of the web.

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