Wouldn’t it be great if all marketing was full of wisdom, information, humor? This makes me smile (the epilogue especially, though the seven pillars are worth reading).
Puffy Planet
It’s big. It’s fluffy. And it’s circling its sun once every 4.5 earth days.
“The largest planet ever found orbiting another star is so puffy it would float on water, astronomers said Thursday.”
As Roger suggests, HAT-P-1 is probably where Claes Oldenburg came from. I’m thinking it might be where The Orb spends its winters.
Jay Rosen
I’m participating this semester in a class on citizen journalism being taught by Dan Gillmor and Bill Gannon, editorial director of Yahoo! News. The class grows out of the new Center for Citizen Media, which is based at the J-School. A great list of speakers lined up for the semester; tonight was Jay Rosen, Associate Professor at NYU’s Department of Journalism and who runs the PRESSthink blog.
Took some loose notes tonight as he spoke about the transformation of distribution mechanisms from one-way to two-way, and how the read/write web will (slowly, painfully) change the way journalism is produced.
———–
There was no such concept as “public opinion” in the 17th century… before the press. What’s the relationship between the press and the public? The atmosphere of the public sphere in the internet age is so different from that under which the old press grew up.
OLD:
One way
One to many
Read only
NEW:
Two way
Many to many
Read/write
Mystery of Genius
Whether a brain belongs to a person with an IQ of 75 or 150, the physical organ looks virtually identical to surgeons. Nor can most existing brain scan techniques tell us much about the “intelligence” of the brain being examined. Intelligence happens on a level that’s difficult to observe, but new techniques are starting to give scientists a glimpse of brain traits that characterize it. Scientists dissect mystery of genius:
The MEG scanner works like a rapid-exposure camera, snapping a thousand pictures each second of electrical activity pulsing through the brain and across its surface. You can actually see a thought unfold in real time.
Advanced brain imaging techniques are turning up some cool observations:
Intelligence research is full of surprises. For example, the brains of smarter people, as measured by IQ, tend to be less active but more efficient, Haier says.
What’s that about how the good programmer is a lazy programmer?
via weblogsky
Notes on iTunes 7
Cover art: When downloading new albums, I usually hunt down the album cover as well. Previously, artwork only showed up optionally in the lower left, in the iTunes screensaver, and on recent iPods. With iTunes 7, Apple has made cover art central. iTunes will now try and retrieve cover art automatically when adding new music, and you can force it to look for artwork of existing tracks with a Ctrl-click. But success is spotty, and you get no feedback if the search was unsuccesful. My guess is that the artwork comes from the iTMS database. But I’ve got albums I know are in iTMS but for which iTunes 7 still fails to retrieve artwork. Looks like this will continue to be a largely manual thing. Meanwhile, two new views in iTunes 7 feature artwork prominently. An album list view shows large versions of artwork along with track listings, and a fancy new “flip” (Coverflow) view uses Quartz to simulate a stack of LPs to sort through:
I like that they’re doing what they can to keep some trace of the album cover experience, but not sure how often I’ll use the feature. Especially since gathering artwork for 95% of my stuff looks like it’s going to remain labor intensive.
Cover art update: Just figured something out. iTunes isn’t doing the normal thing and putting cover art into the ID3v2 data area of music files – it’s storing it in subdirs of ~/Music/iTunes/Album Artwork . I had wondered why it used to take 20 seconds or so to write album cover data into every track of an album, but that it suddenly seems to happen really fast. Apparently the speedup is because iTunes doesn’t have to alter every file – it just stores the art files as external .itc files (i tunes cover?) and associates the images in the library. This is nice for speed and nice for not swelling library sizes, but sucks for portability between machines/platforms. Why isn’t this a preference? Or an optional mechanism to “permanently store art inside music files?” I’ve posted about this in my O’Reilly Mac blog, which has sparked a thread.
Genre view: Is gone. The new widget for accessing the Coverflow view replaces the old Browse icon, which used to let you sift and sort your collection by artist, year, album, or genre. In other words, Apple has replaced a whole lot of functionality with eye candy, which is annoying. You can still do era and genre tricks with Smart Playlists or via search (which is generally very effective), but hate to see the Browse view … hang on, I’m an idiot. They’ve just moved the Browse icon from the top right to a subtle gray replacement icon at the lower right; it’s been demoted, not removed.
New scrollbars: Mixed feelings. The “solid” look is kind of refreshing in comparison to the usual Aqua gel-cap look, but what is it with Apple ignoring the HIG and experimenting with new interface looks all the time? Does this portend a global change to Aqua, or are they just monkeying around to gauge reactions? To change the look of scrollbars in one app and leave the rest of the OS with glow-y scrollbars feels weird. Maybe they’re just treating the early adopters user base as a guinea pig farm; releasing the UI change into a single app, then watching blogs and mailing lists to see how the world reacts.
Multiple libraries: Long overdue – You can now divide your library into multiple libraries and manage them separately, which is useful for people sharing a single login, or if you want to move just part of a collection to another machine, or if your library is so large it causes performance problems. I really expected to see this in iPhoto before iTunes (it’s been possible with 3rd party utils forever).
Update: Check out Dan Sandler’s dissection of the new UI, in high-res PDF or low-res JPG.
Democracy TV
No, it’s not Al Gore’s newest cable channel. Democracy is a free, cross-platform internet TV player built on top of the VLC client, which ignores DRM and plays “anything it can get its paws on.” The development model and site is clearly based on the success of Firefox (getfirefox.com/getdemocracy.com, similar design). BitTorrent is built right in, so anyone can host an internet TV channel of their own without going broke over bandwidth.
Boing-Boing: The 0.9 release can tune in over 600 free channels being published by creative people all over the world. 0.9 adds support for Flash video, and comes (partially) translated into 30+ languages. It also supports drag-and-drop for individual video files, making it the only video player you need on your desktop.
The project comes out of the Participatory Culture Foundation, which aims to snatch TV itself from the hands of the man. Haven’t tried it yet, but Democracy appears to be well-polished even before 1.0, and is purportedly super easy to use, which is critical for those who don’t want to geek around with shadowy sites and BitTorrent clients.
Ironically / coincidentally, for hours now the front of the iTunes Music Store has displayed nothing but a black screen splashed with white words: “It’s Showtime,” which suggests a major change coming sometime today. Internet TV is starting to matter.
Future Be Warned
Since we apparently have decided not to dump nuclear waste into volcanoes, we’re busy stuffing it into the earth. Thousands of tons of radioactive sludge, equipment, tools, and chemicals we just don’t know what else to do with are being interred in permanent burial sites such as the one in the New Mexico desert. The stuff may be safe for now, but some of this stuff has a half-life of 10,000 years. How do we ensure that future generations will know the area is dangerous? Even if all intelligent life is wiped out and humanity gets rebooted, so we can’t assume any kind of evolved linguistic comprehension? Wired:
The waste site will be surrounded by a four-mile outer fence of dozens of 25-foot, 20-ton granite markers engraved with multi-lingual and pictographic warnings. Inside that perimeter will be a massive earthen berm 33 feet high, forming a rectangle matching the footprint of the underground site. The berm will be implanted with magnets and radar reflectors to make it obvious that it’s not a natural formation. A structure in the center of the space and two subterranean rooms will hold detailed information on the facility, and hundreds of super-hard disks printed with pictographic danger signs will be scattered throughout its 120 acres.
Solano Stroll, EXIF
The Solano Avenue Stroll is a massive (and I do mean massive) annual street fair in these parts. You know the drill – a zillion booths, overpriced food, mediocre music (with a few gems in the straw), kook cars, inflatable rides for the kiddos. So dense with humans you can barely move. Miles’ preschool took part in the parade, which meant he and I became clowns for a day. Had the presence of mind to snap a shot when the makeup was fresh.
Having a lot of fun extracting EXIF data from JPEGs with PHP for a special project I’ve been working on lately. A few lines of code gets you something like this:
Continue reading “Solano Stroll, EXIF”
Greenphone
Hack your phone, void the warranty? Trolltech’s upcoming Linux-based Greenphone, due this month, is meant to be hacked. “The company says it expects to be “surprised” by what users come up with.”
CTO Benoit Schillings added, “I’ll tell you a secret. Getting the phone into open source developers’ hands is exactly what I want to happen.”
Benoit Schillings? Hold the phone (no pun intended). Benoit was a key software engineer at Be. One of the first to join the company, in fact. Goes around, comes around. Great to see he’s up to cool stuff. Not sure I’d be cool with a chartreuse phone though.
Thanks mneptok
Life Is Easy
Attended a camp-out with our pre-school a couple weekends ago – Miles’ first night in a tent, marshmallow roasts, hikes, lovely time. Bedtime was interesting — watching and hearing other families’ bedtime rituals in nearby tents. One little guy was melting down for one of those unfathomable reasons only other three-year-olds could possibly understand, and I overheard his father talking him down:
“Hey. Life is easy.”
It struck me as the most elegant, understandable introduction to The Tao you could possibly give a child.
