Archive for the 'Cool' Category

eee

I got an Eee PC just before christmas.  I’ve used it for a few days, so here are some first impressions.

First, the good: the build quality is good, the screen is excellent, the sound is good as is the microphone.  The webcam works fine, the touch pad is well tuned and the OS it ships with is very nicely put together. The wifi worked out of the box with WPA, which is better than I can say for any laptop I’ve used before, with any OS.

There’s a lot of talk about how to put Windows XP on them.  I honestly can’t see the point.

In fact the whole package is ludicrously good for it’s price point.  So good I think Asus have really invented a whole new category (Charlie Stross has some well-considered thoughts on this).  Any PC manufacturer who isn’t now planning their own line in this new category is an idiot.

There have been “Ultra Micro” PCs before, but the price is a key factor - this is the first disposable general purpose computer.  There’s no point fretting about the lifetime of the integral solid state drive, because you will have bought a new eee pc before it runs out.  I’m already planning to get another one (and this time it’ll be black).

One of the things you notice about new technology categories is that you find new use cases you didn’t know you had.  I’ve started listening to podcasts in bed - the eee functions as a bedside internet radio.  Last night, the Now Show. The night before, In Our Time.  Honestly, it’s worth getting one just for bedtime podcasts.

There are some downsides.  The 800×480 screen is not big enough for a number of websites.  I hope this encourages developers to consider small screens when building sites - I’ll certainly be testing our new sites on the eee  myself.  There is enough physical room in the lid of the machine for a larger screen, and I bet that’s near the top of their list for new models.

Not as high, I hope, as bluetooth. This is the only real gripe  I have (apart from a perennial one below).  Bluetooth is so ubiquitous I was really surprised to see it absent.  It’s amazingly useful for mobile Internet, something I use quite a bit anyway (even if mostly with train or coffee shop wifi).

You can plug in a bluetooth dongle into one of the three (3!) USB ports of course, but it’s nowhere near as neat.  This machine really needs bluetooth.  Obviously 3G, when it comes, will be even better.  As soon as they release a machine with integral 3G, I’m getting it.

Other models will obviously have more RAM and a larger disk, but the RAM is field upgradable and the disk is actually large enough for most people, even with only 4GB.  Adding an SDHC card for storage is trivial, and cheap.  Play.com do a 16GB one for 50 quid.

My one other gripe? The keyboard is designed for right handers.  The space bar doesn’t work if you tap it on the left.  If you are a left-handed typist you hit the space bar with your left thumb.  I’ve had to change my hand position on the otherwise perfectly usable keyboard so I can hit space.

Us left-handers are a sizable minority of the population.  We are honestly worth considering when designing stuff.  Saying “ah well 10% of our users are going to have a substandard experience because we cannot be bothered to support them” is NOT good enough.  Asus are nowhere near alone in this though.  Perhaps fuel for a future post.

All that said, I’m writing this post on the Eee, and it is more than acceptable.  This really is one of the best designed bits of tech I’ve got in many many years.  You should seriously consider buying one, you are bound to use it more than you can imagine.

Suburban in Witley

This is like something out of Lovecraft:

A particularly prolific forum that deals with Urban and Underground exploration carried a post from a new member giving details from a book in their possession. The book contained a description of a glass ballroom constructed by a Victorian Millionaire, quite special in itself no doubt, but this particular ballroom supposedly resides at the bottom of a lake on the Millionaire’s former estate. The author goes on to describe a visit he took to the ballroom and how it is reached through fantastic underground tunnels, cavernous rooms and waterways. It seemed perhaps a little exaggerated to say the least, but as more and more information was posted it seemed increasingly likely that it actually did exist.

Not only did it exist, but there are photographs, and a map.

Cthulu LARPing anyone?

25 Photographs taken at the exact right time

He’s not kidding.

Forkd goes into pre-beta

As some of you probably know, I started working on Forkd over 2 years ago. Well, many others have taken up the baton also, and Forkd has entered pre-beta!

We’re not taking registrations quite yet, but an elite band of cooks are testing the system right now.  More news as it comes in!

Someone lend me 15k

I want one.

Wireless power?

I’ve been waiting for this for, well it seems like forever.  The comments in the forum thread aren’t too optimistic though.  I hope they’ve achieved more than the naysayers think…

dabble db

I’ve recently started using an application called dabble db. Without gushing too much, I think it’s the best online application I’ve used, period. It’s right up there with google’s maps, reader and email. In fact, if google have any sense they’ll buy dabbledb right NOW since it’s so damned good. It’s making my life massively easier already just working with some pretty simple data.

The application itself is really a database, but the User Interface is superb. It presents a sort of spreadsheet interface but instead of being a spreadsheet under the hood it’s a full relational database. Upload a spreadsheet and get going, and before you know it you’re working with vastly more control and much more naturally than previously. If you work with a lot of spreadsheets you really have to check it out.

Some predictions from 1900

Predictions of the Year 2000 from The Ladies Home Journal of December 1900. Frankly I think he did amazingly well.  The most revealing though, are the entries that he gets utterly wrong…

He obviously missed the effect of everyone having a car (one of his other predictions):

Prediction #3: Gymnastics will begin in the nursery, where toys and games will be designed to strengthen the muscles. Exercise will be compulsory in the schools. Every school, college and community will have a complete gymnasium. All cities will have public gymnasiums. A man or woman unable to walk ten miles at a stretch will be regarded as a weakling.

And how hard insects really are.  Imagine, roaches being extinct:

Prediction #11: No Mosquitoes nor Flies.  Insect screens will be unnecessary.  Mosquitoes, house-flies and roaches will have been practically exterminated.  Boards of health will have destroyed all mosquito haunts and breeding-grounds, drained all stagnant pools, filled in all swamp-lands, and chemically treated all still-water streams.  The extermination of the horse and its stable will reduce the house-fly.

 And this is just plain batshit:

Prediction #16: There will be No C, X or Q in our every-day alphabet. They will be abandoned because unnecessary. Spelling by sound will have been adopted, first by the newspapers. English will be a language of condensed words expressing condensed ideas, and will be more extensively spoken than any other. Russian will rank second.

Aha, he predicted the Intertubes:

Prediction #22: Store Purchases by Tube. Pneumatic tubes, instead of store wagons, will deliver packages and bundles. These tubes will collect, deliver and transport mail over certain distances, perhaps for hundreds of miles. They will at first connect with the private houses of the wealthy; then with all homes. Great business establishments will extend them to stations, similar to our branch post-offices of today, whence fast automobile vehicles will distribute purchases from house to house.

But this is more like the other stuff, pretty perceptive.  I never knew cattle used to be able to run…

Prediction #28: There will be no wild animals except in menageries. Rats and mice will have been exterminated. The horse will have become practically extinct. A few of high breed will be kept by the rich for racing, hunting and exercise. The automobile will have driven out the horse. Cattle and sheep will have no horns. They will be unable to run faster than the fattened hog of today. A century ago the wild hog could outrun a horse. Food animals will be bred to expend practically all of their life energy in producing meat, milk, wool and other by-products. Horns, bones, muscles and lungs will have been neglected.

Innovative 4-gangs?

To be honest, I’d have through the 4-way mains extension was pretty much innovation-proof. I mean, what could you improve?

Well here’s two really smart ones I’ve come across this week: OneClickPower and
PowerSquid.

Very smart. Now, I wonder if they can combine the two…

Singularity?

OK, so maybe Google is really trying to immanentise the eschaton. I guess if we’re going to have a hard take-off singularity, I would rather it happens at Google than in some defence establishment…