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The Korean Afterlife

While stuck on a Jubilee Line train in London, my friend Ian was told the following description of the Korean afterlife by a fellow commuter.  It struck me as quite beautiful.

In the afterlife, heaven and hell are identical; in each, there is a glorious, never-ending banquet full of wonderful foods, but everyone only has three-foot chopsticks with which to eat.  Everyone in hell is having an awful time as they play with, and stare at the food which they can't manage to get into their mouths.  In heaven, it's a party: everyone realised they simply need to feed one another.

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Infinite loops, anyone?

Source: Python programming: an introduction to computer science by John M. Zelle (thanks @sthulbourn!)

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The Heritage Orchestra

A little bit addicted to these guys at the moment and trying to find when they'll next be playing live.  Particularly Tell Me Stories (Spotify link), and I'm trying to find somewhere I can buy this as a FLAC. 

That's another point right there - how long before we move from our digital downloads being offered in MP3 format (albeit high quality 320 kbps) to a lossless format such as FLAC?  I'm willing to pay more for an identical digital copy, and while some dance labels are playing ball with this, it's by no means easy to find most commercial music offered lossless.  It's not even DRM that's a problem now - the iTunes Store has shown that.  Bandwidth is cheap in 2010 surely?

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Video production is hard

So we've reached Friday and Neowin is now down while we upgrade the site to Ignition, our new content platform, and Atlas, the new look and feel.  This has been in the pipeline for over two years and is a huge achievement for all concerned.  Seriously excited about having it launched!

As part of the proceedings I created the following promo video and wow, doing things right with video takes time.  It's the first time I've tried to do any kind of production and it's as you'd expect - the time taken on a print ad, multiplied by a whole other dimension of motion.  Used in the production is the rather superb ScreenFlow by Telestream.

Biggest tip I was given?  Align your camera movements and visual transitions to the beat.  Makes all the difference in the pursuit of 'visual balance'.  Watch in HD, full-screen for the full effect.

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Vodafone? More like voda-phony.

Before I start, I'd like to state that I'm not a mathematician, and it's entirely possible that I've made an error while researching this post. So please comment and correct me if this is indeed the case.

The following hyperbolic quotation is located on the Vodafone UK site with regards to its iPhone price plans:

You also get a staggering 1GB of data - enough for 10,000 web pages, over 16 hours of streaming video and generally getting the best from your iPhone apps.

16 hours of streaming video with a 1GB allowance?  Let's look at some figures.  1GB data is equal to 1,048,576 KB.  16 hours is equal to 57,600 seconds.  Which brings us to a staggering bitrate of 18.2KB/s.  In perspective, the BBC iPlayer iPhone stream is approximately 512KB/s.  Admittedly 18.2KB/s is fine if you don't care about making out the faces of any people you're watching.

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Platform Persuasion

So apparently Google rate Chrome quite highly. Took this photo on the Bakerloo Line northbound platform at Oxford Circus this morning. Every single ad space.

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Quick test of the Yamaha Pocketrak 2G

  
(download)

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Why the small details make a big difference

Raymond Chen is one of my favourite technical bloggers.  On his site, "The Old New Thing", he takes a whimsical look at Windows internals past and present, often from his perspective as a long-serving Microsoft employee.

Some years ago he posted a series of articles on scrollbars - a seemingly innocuous UI element with hidden depth.  The behavioural intricacies that users have come to expect when scrolling - from distances and delays to hit areas and dragging operations - are difficult to emulate if creating a control from scratch.  And without the details, he notes, your program will just feel 'odd' in a strange way that you often can't pinpoint.

While an enjoyable read, I began to fully understand this a couple of days ago as I set about creating a Facebook-style tag editor for the new design of Neowin.  Various plugins exist including the excellent FCBKcomplete but I wanted to give it a shot myself.

The initial prototype was completed relatively quickly in HTML, CSS and jQuery, but it didn't feel smooth, if that's the right word.  Turns out it was the myriad of enhancements - small in development effort but numerous - that mattered:

  • Providing visual feedback when refusing duplicate tags
  • Cancelling the input of a tag with the Escape key
  • Deleting a previous tag with the Backspace key
  • Allowing the Tab, Enter or Comma keys to commit a tag
  • Various focus fixes for keeping text entry of multiple tags speedy
  • Providing visual help on adding a tag when focus is elsewhere

I'm sure I've missed some, but it seems the small details really do matter in the pursuit of maximum usability.  Users shouldn't have to work out how to use your web application; it should use familiar, tried and tested paradigms to which they can relate without thinking.  And I suppose developing consciously with that in mind can only come with experience.

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NeowinCAST In Depth: Mobile Broadband

Some of you may know that I host a series of podcasts at Neowin.net on technology news affecting consumers and industry professionals.

A couple of months ago I interviewed Christian Payne (aka Documentally, of OurMainInside.com), Ilicco Elia (Head of Consumer Mobile at Reuters) and Kate Day (Telegraph Community Editor) for their thoughts on the current state of mobile broadband in the UK.  In addition, I performed a quick review of the Novatel MiFi™ 2352 Intelligent Mobile Hotspot.

Take a look on Neowin's site for download and subscription information, or use the player below to listen now.

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Welcome to the site

You know what they say: just as a builder's house is never finished, a developer's site is often neglected.  Certainly been the case with me, but I'm hopeful this blog powered by the great guys at Posterous should get things going :)

More to come soon.

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Rob Wright

Rob Wright

Web developer, podcaster and all-round techie living and working in London.
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