31 October

Eroica

Today was my boss's last day, and, ironically, my first anniversary. Julian Lombardi will be Duke's Assistant Vice President for Academic Services and Technology Support. He'll be responsible for the university's IT customer service and development.

They made him an offer he couldn't refuse.
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21:13:49 - Stearns - 3 comments

30 October

Touchability

I've been trying to capture “what it is” about software that has a sense of fun, is toylike, and which allows users to feel they are directly manipulating “real” objects that they more-or-less understand. I want to shorten the link with pen pointers instead of mice. That's a lot of words. There's something more basic.

Touchability. I think human beings are uniquely wired to fondle stuff, and to want to do so. My dog sniffs and tastes. Ants use their antennae. We comprehend and alter the world with our hands. I play with my so-touchable wine glass, but not with the utilitarian water glass next to it. No child can resist touching a musical instrument left out, particularly strings and pianos because they don't need lips. I always reach for my leather coat before my ski jacket. Bad Flash sites are visually stimulating, but good ones make me want to touch it all over to be rewarded with workings and sounds.
10:43:14 - Stearns - 4 comments

25 October

The Way Things Go

Der Lauf der Dinge is that film in which a whole series of objects cascade in a very long Rube Goldberg. (I understand many cultures have had similar cartoonists. I think its wonderful that where previous generations drew pictures, civilization has developed to the point where individuals can and do actually realize and record such fantasies.) You may have seen a take-off of this in a car ad.

I think the reason for our fascination with this has to do with movement carrying the action. You can have theme and variation without movement, and without physical objects. Consider novels, painting, music, and zillion other things. But here we have a case where there is nothing of interest at all except for the theme and variation expressed by the movement and positioning of physical objects. And it is fascinating. A reviewer has written of the film that it is like watching a Hitchcock film with objects instead of people.

I think this all relates to previous discussion on narrative and 3D.

[This is fallout from a session at OOPSLA.]
21:33:47 - Stearns - 1 comment

23 October

What politician will claim, “I destroyed the Internet?”

I admit I haven't thought through the implications of the FCC's recent orders about the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, but I'm pretty damn sure that our leaders haven't thought it through.

The idea is to create the biggest unfunded mandate in history by forcing all Internet service providers to retool their systems to make it easier for the feds to monitor communications. The cost to universities alone is said to be at least $7B. I don't know what this does to municipal and home grown mesh network systems. I suppose that the intent is to make it too expensive for anyone but a TelCo to operate anything other than restrictive high-level services. The prophetic David Reed laid out the the issues five years ago, saying it much better than I can.

To this I would add an uneasiness as to what steps a person must now apply, or is allowed to apply, to protect “intellectual property.” We are required to take practical precautions to keep our freedom of privacy else we loose it. If we wreck the Internet in a rush to destroy any practical means of protecting privacy, then who in the end will be allowed to actually claim the priviledge of privacy? Only those large institutions who can afford to run their own government-approved private networks?
12:34:56 - Stearns - No comments

02 October

Demand-driven design?

I want a Macintosh Tablet, but this guy is agitating for one in a strange and maybe wonderful consumer-based pull-marketing campaign.
15:20:43 - Stearns - 1 comment

01 October

Low res or no res?

I sometimes get asked about Croquet for computing devices with lower graphics capability, such as today's phone/PDA/iPods. I think the train of thought is that there's so much in Croquet that could be valuable independently of the immersive 3D environment, so shouldn't that part be available on lesser machines?

I feel it is only worthwhile to initially build Croquet – all of Croquet and only one Croquet – on machines with the best commonly available graphics capability and also on those with no visual capability whatsoever!
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20:08:16 - Stearns - 3 comments