"The intel on this wasn't 100%."
 
Tuesday, February 28, 2006
I so much want to be better writer. When faced with the blank sheet of paper or the empty new document, I seize up. My brain has millions of things it wants to write down, but my fingers only type things that are not exactly as the brain has thought. I started blogging to help me write. If you notice, not all of it is good. A lot of it is bad. I try to be a better writer, but can't. So I don't. That is my procrastination source.

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The following is what I spewed out as a review of the book. This is what I procrastinated about. I hope it reads well, because I don't really want to edit over again. One thing missing is examples. The doc will dock me points because of that.


Ben Shneiderman in his book, Leonardo’s Laptop: Human Needs and the New Computing Technologies, develops a vision of the future for human interactions with computers that is optimistic. In it, he writes that the future of computing will be about the empowerment of the end-user. Human-computer interactions will satisfy the needs of the end-user needs rather than the developers of the computing technologies. The software developers goal is then to help the end-user to achieve a goal and establish a community. Shneiderman lays out the new methodologies to achieve this goal by constructin a new human-computer interaction paradigm revolving around the “collect, relate, create, donate” mantra. He applies this to four societal aspects that can benefit from the new paradigm: education, business, healthcare, and politics. Each of these are important to society and by focusing on user’s needs as they relate to computing in these fields, Shneiderman asks of the reader to envision this future where computers serve mankind for the better.

Reading this book, one has to take into account which prospective type of computer user one is. Either, you read it with the jaundiced eyes of a software developer who knows the limits of computer technology or with the wide-eyed, wonderment of a end-user new to the technology. From the start, Shneiderman tries to instill in both types a sense of what to do and what is expected to ensure that the future of computing remain as human as possible. He creates a paradigm around his “collect, relate, create, donate” motto. This is useful to both types of users. The developer aids the end-user by developing software to meet these four needs. Software should be written to enable the end-user to collect information, to enable the end-user to relate their ideas to others, to enable the end-user to create and innovate for personal enjoyment, and enable the end-user to donate back to community furthering society as a whole. With the “collect, relate, create, donate” examples throughout the book, Shneiderman has given the software user and software developer a sense of purpose to computing technology.

Shneiderman sets some lofty goals with his book. To make computing technology personal, he creates a foil for future users in the guise of a new Leonardo. Throughout the book, he returns to this idiom to make the reader aware of the possibilities with the use of computers. This, in my opinion is the weakest aspect of the book. While I admire Leonardo as an artist and creative thinker, I find that he is too distant of a figure to relate to. The new renaissance man is few and fare between to happen in this day and age. Computers facilitate specialization and Shneiderman’s use of a new Leonardo does not take into today’s world of niches. In the last chapter, he describes how this new Leonardo will use the computer. He is creative, he is smart, and he is innovate, but that today and in the future will be a hard talent to find.

The strongest section of the book is in Shneiderman’s descriptions of a new education and government paradigm with the aid computers. Education is the new hope and can readily fit into the “collect, relate, create, donate” cycle. As teachers integrate computing technology, the benefits will affect society. They are the front lines to enable our youngest end users to be part of the future. Teachers will, with the help of computers, collect information for their students, relate those ideas to them, create innovative techniques to challenge their students, and donate back to the community by teaching the young.

As for the new politics, computing technology will enable the citizens to participate and be an important part of it. Citizens, as well as government agencies, can collect information that betters their predicament, relate their status within a community, create innovative measures to address societal failures, and donate back by being an active participant in the government itself. It is the promise that technology holds for bringing communities together which is what Shneiderman tried to focus on, and in the new politics, is the promise fulfilled.

Unfortunately for Shneiderman, his vision of the future of new business has already come to pass. He writes about customization that is to come, but since the book was probably written in the year 2002 his advice seems dated. Perhaps reading the book at that time it would have been closer to being prescient, but now with it already here, it just seems trite.

Finally, the most inspiring chapter of the book comes at the end. In the chapter entitled “Mega-Creativity,” Shneiderman discusses the types of creativity at which computers can aid humans: evolutionary creativity. This is taking small, incremental steps of refinement to better an idea already in the creative marketplace. It is not the revolutionary creativity that comes once in a lifetime, nor is it the everyday creativity wherein the individual adds flair to a banal task. As a tool computers enable the developer to craft programs that empower the end-user’s creativity, as well as his own. Shneiderman admits that it is this aspect of the computing technology that has potential for expanding the horizons of humanity. It is in this chapter where he achieves the goal to inspire all types of computer users to pursue using computers to further expand society.

Overall, Shneiderman may have written this book as an observation about the future direction of computers and human interaction, but he has achieved a new manifesto for developers to follow to make good of the use of the computer tools. The big theme of “collect, relate, create, donate” should be followed by all users of computers, especially those that want to be leaders into the future.
Monday, February 27, 2006
verb [ intrans. ]
delay or postpone action; put off doing something : it won't be this price for long, so don't procrastinate.


I am stuck on writing a review of a book. It is now 11:31PM....
Sunday, February 26, 2006
Don Knotts has died. Goodbye, Mr. Furley. May the you and Jack Tripper rock that Regal Beagle in the sky. Don't let him turn back into the tinkerbell.

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Thursday, February 23, 2006
This dude is so lucky. A $10,000 scholarship in his name at Julliard. Wow. Also, $10,000 worth of iTunes music. And 10 iPods. And that 20 inch iMac.
I am watching the women's (ladies?) figure skating. I already know the outcome. Why am I watching it then?

Go Bel Air girl! Oh. You got sixth.

Go Sacha Cohen! No not Alli G, Sasha Cohen! Oh. You fell and got second. You fall and got second? How does that happen?

Like my father, I dread everytime a skater falls. "Once they fall," he use to say, "it's over."

The Americans didn't do so well. Perhaps the curse of Michelle Kwan robbed them of a medal filled Olympics.

Update: The Americans are falling. Sasha Cohen is still geting the silver. Bel Air girl, Kimmie has the jitters. Still a wonderful performance. The judging is weird no more 10s and it is so anticlimactic.
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
MacIntel Ad

Another topic we discussed in tonight's class was the question if "computers inspire creativity?"

Once again the Windows consultants in class said no. They couldn't ever imagine a computer helping someone be creative. I pity their outlook in life. Why would anyone ever use Windows if this was the case?

One of them said that, while there are software programs that help you create things, computers do nothing to inspire creativity. He said that photoshopping is nothing like painting and that computers are for performing various drudgw work.

I wanted to snap, "Get a Mac!" That will show you the endless possibilities of being creative. Break those chains and get a mac. You don't know what you're missing.

Computers are tools. Software programs are tools. In the artist's hands, these tools can do amazing things. Look at digital animation. That is creative! I think that using them will ignite the creative side of you. You never know until you've tried.

This is why I like the Mac platform. There are endless inspiring programs coming out for it. I believe the indy Mac developer world is just like the indy film world of the eighties. It is ready to go big time. If it could just change the developers that are like that Windows consultant, then Apple could rule the world. I think that day is coming.

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As you know, I am going to school for a masters in software engineering. One of the classes I am taking this semester is Human Computer Interactions. A very social-sciency type of subject. Tonight's lecture topic was software tools. Programs that create other programs. This relates back to HCI, because these types of programs aid the developers in crafting the software. The lecture was just a categorization of the various types available.

This topic is a virtual grenade for software developers. Ask ten different software developers their favorite editor and you may get ten different answers. Ask them their preferred language and get a myriad of names. Ask them favorite platform and watch the whole thing explode in your face.

Tonight, the instuctor let slip that Java was faster than Visual Basic. I ran for cover. I was expecting a total flame war to break out, live in class. It happened.

We have a mix of developers in class. There are the web services folks, me the embedded systems guy, a lady who has to do COBOL, a Java dude and a few MS developers. One in particular has been a consultant/programmer on the MS Windows platform for about 15 years. He knows his Windows stuff and had to respond back to the Java versus VB jab. The Java dude had to respond back. I think if the instructor was not a woman it would've gotten ugly real fast. I, being a MacAddict, stayed out of this fight. Everyone knows that Macs rule.

Tempers simmered, and we ended up agreeing to disagree. That is the best tact.

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Tuesday, February 21, 2006
There's a brand new offshoot from The Seed. I don't know what this is going to be about, but I know this, there won't be any pooping there.

The Kaleidoscopic Pinhole

Now we can have even more self-referential conversations.
Sunday, February 19, 2006
After reading this article, the first thing to come to my mind was, "Has it really been 10 years?"


The film was ahead of its time, Favreau said, setting the stage for the type of comedy found in more recent box office hits “Old School” and “Wedding Crashers.”

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Saturday, February 18, 2006
After spending the morning browsing the wares at Farpoint 2006, I wondered what other geeky activity is in my future. To go with all the Robotech posting, I may have to try Otakon this year.

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My Macross thread has been going on very well. Nice mix of comments. Even the big W showed up. Thinking about it, the seed noted that the cast of NewsRadio should play the parts. I like considering they did their own take on a film (see Sinking Ship).

Dave Foley as Rick Hunter or Exedore.
The late Phil Hartman as Dolza.
Joe Rogan as Khyron.
Maura Tierney as Lisa Mill... er Hayes.
Andy Dick as Max.
Khandi Alexander as Claudia.
Jon Lovitz as Breetai.
And Stephen Root as Roy.

What a strange list.

Anyway, I wanted to list his suggestions here so that we can compare.
Rick and Lisa
Roy
Minmei
Dolza, Breetai and Gloval
Maz?!
Miriya
Claudia
Ben

Keep them coming. And as an enticement: Miriya!

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Thursday, February 16, 2006
From the comments in Capitol Swell's post on the hotness of Grace Park comes this interesting tidbit from the seed.


2ndseed said...

The only thing that sucks about watching Battlestar Galactica is that it isn't Macross. That batlles definitly look like a scene from any Macross battle, the ship full of citizens just trying to make ends meet. Man it's so close to being Macross. Battlestar is just a TV show and it's truly amazing. Just imagine a live trilogy movie adaption of Macross. I'm not saying the whole Robotech Saga, just Macross. It would blow away anything before and after.


Battlestar Galactica is a very good show. I have it on TiVo and usually watch it Saturday mornings just to catch up. Grace Park doesn't do it for me. She's too cylon-y. She's hot in that picture, but...

Anyway, I liked the Macross interjection in the comment. So let's open up this joint and see who to cast in a live version of Macross. I am starting this thread to see who you think should play the parts.

Instead of being serious, I am going to start with something amusing: casting the "Frat Pack" in the male roles.

Roy Fokker : Vince Vaughn
Rick Hunter : ??? [I don't know]
Breetai : Jon Favreau
Captain Gloval : Stephen Root
Khyron : Ben Stiller
Ben : Owen Wilson
Max Sterling : Luke Wilson
Dolza : Will Ferrell
Exedore : David Duchovny
Lynn Kyle : Ron Livingston

The women's roles? Let's get some hotties.
Lisa : Rachel McAdams
Lynn Minmei : Devon Aoki [I don't like this pick, but who knows hot young chinese actresses?]
Claudia : Gabrielle Union
Azonia : Catherine Zeta-Jones
Miriya : Kate Beckinsale
Sammie : Kirsten Dunst
Kim : Lindsay Lohan
Vanessa : Eliza Dushku

Now that is a funky list. The actresses are hot and the men are funny. I wonder how that would work? Post your's in the comments.

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Well, security through less popular appeal doesn't seem to be working. The dudes at Ambrosia software has posted a notice on their site about a piece of code that is a trojan horse that will mess with your Mac. That's right. A Macintosh! Beware of the coming doom.


A file called "latestpics.tgz" was posted on a Mac rumors web site http://www.macrumors.com/ , claiming to be pictures of "MacOS X Leopard" (an upcoming version of MacOS X, aka "MacOS X 10.5"). It is actually a Trojan (or arguably, a very non-virulent virus). We'll call it "Oompa-Loompa" (aka "OSX/Oomp-A") for reasons that will become obvious.


If you are a Mac addict and need some protection from the black hats try clamXav, a freeware virus scanner for OS X.
Wednesday, February 15, 2006
Just as good as that gummi de Milo episode of the Simpsons.

Do you believe in Serendipity? As I sit here trying to write up a review of the latest flick from my Netflix queue, I don't know. Before sitting down, I thought that the movie stunk. If it is supposed to be a romantic comedy, there was nothing funny about it. There was really nothing romantic about it. John Cusack waits until the night of his wedding to realize that he doesn't love his fiancee, attempts find the long lost love of his life, and dumps his fiance on the altar? Excuse me, but isn't that the opposite of romance, but really terrible and heart breaking?

I couldn't believe it, romance, what a lark!

But then the serendipitous moment occurred. Wasn't yesterday Valentine's day? I missed it again. Alone naturally. And guess who starred in the flick. Kate Beckinsale! A hottie! And guess what, there's a nice, little, untitled post up on Capitol Swell celebrating the hotness of her. And our buddy at the seed, was inspired to do a hottie countdown/roundup from that post.

So you see how fortuitous things are. I watch a supposed romantic comedy the day after Valentine's day alone, which starred the hottie who inspired my buddy to begin his hottie countdown!

How weird is that?

By the way, I marked the movie as 2 of 5 stars.

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Tuesday, February 14, 2006
Similar to how to fold a shirt, this page takes a look at how to fold a fitted sheet. I am posting this here so as not to lose this. Fitted sheets are the worst of them all. I like their convenience and the fact that they hardly come off, but folding them after the wash sucks big time. My sheets are so wrinkled. Any way for those who do their own laundry, enjoy.
Monday, February 13, 2006
How to survive a robot uprising
Milk & Cheese!
Milk & Cheese!,
originally uploaded by The Devil Puppet.
These vinyl sculpts of dairy products gone bad are awesome. Again, someone get me this. And no littleseedling, some hack photoshop job won't be enough.

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This is supposed to be a Netflix queue DVD review. Then, why's it got a title referencing the VP's accidental shooting? Well, the DVD that I saw over the weekend was Insomnia. Not the US remake, but the original Swedish (or Norwegian) film.

If you hadn't seen it, the flick centers around an accidental shooting and cover up. Just like the VP, but someone dies. In the DVD.

I was roughly confused for the first part. I couldn't tell Swedish from Norwegian. And that was a key part of the film. Yet, in the end I liked it.

Marked it as 3 of 5 stars. How convenient that the Netflix rating system matches my own.

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Sunday, February 12, 2006
Here's another link to some fine art (if you can call it that) that I wish someone to buy it for me. That last sentence is awkward. This next one should be just fine. Check out Chris Bishop and his web comic is not too bad either.

ART SHOW
Bedrock Billards in Washington DC. January 6 - March 3

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Milk and Cheese rock. No not the dairy products (although cheese is good), the dairy products that have gone bad. Please someone, buy some of this art for me.
Saturday, February 11, 2006
Yay! A wintery storm has finally come. I like it when it snows. Quiet. Peaceful. I guess this is it for winter 2006.

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Thursday, February 09, 2006
The latest flick from my Netflix queue is The Triumph of the Nerds: The Rise of Accidental Empires. This was a documentary on the rise of the personl computer industry done around 1996, the Jurassic period in computer epochs.

The narrator was Robert X. Cringely who used to write a weekly column about the movers and shakers of Silicon Valley. He writes an online column for PBS.org and has very insightful things to say about the industry. I read his writings every week. This week he explains why Jobs is good for Disney. Read it. Then go buy stock in Apple. Jobs is just that good.

Anyway, back to the DVD. The story ends in 1996. Windows 95 was just released and the internet had yet to become the ubiquitous thing it is today. At the end, Cringely goes over the fortunes of the main players: Gates, Microsoft, Jobs, and Apple.

In 1996, Apple's fortunes were down and it looked as if the end was near. Steve Jobs was 10 years in exile from Apple after being unceremoniously dumped in 1986. He was just the CEO of a little animation company Pixar. Oh and also of a small startup NeXT computing.

In 1996, Bill Gates was the richest man in America. Microsoft was the dominant computer company. It was good to be a Microserf.

In 1996, Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle, preached the joy of the internet and the future of computing as a thin client connected to the Web. The PC was not in the picture.

What happened in the PC industry in those 10 years until now?

Microsoft still got bigger. Is still the 100lb gorilla of the personal computer industry. Apple did not fail. It has become a major player in the new computing world order. Bill Gates is a successful philanthropist and is the richest man in the world. Larry Ellison is a nobody. Steve Jobs is now the head of Disney.

Cringely closes the show with an acknowledgement that the industry will always be changing. He said that it would take 30 years for society to find uses for technology that has been introduced. In 1996, the personal computing industry had been around for about 20 years. He said he would like to revisit the Silicon Valley players in 10 years. It is now 2006. I wonder what he will find?

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Wednesday, February 08, 2006
... for music.

Can you win at the billionth iTunes download? Check out the prizes. $10,000 worth songs. How many albums is that? Or even how many TV shows?

You can buy or use this entry form to enter. No purchase necessary. For those running Tiger, use this dashboard widget to help estimate when to enter.

Good luck. And if you win can I get one of those iPods. Thanks in advance.
Sunday, February 05, 2006
I see from APCB that the powers that be are releasing an extended version of Dune. No not the scifi channel's remake, but the honest god goodness of David Lynch's masterpiece. This is something to watch out for.
Friday, February 03, 2006
HULK'S DIARY THAT IS ON THE INTERNET

That statement alone does not sum up how funny this thing is.
Thursday, February 02, 2006
100000
100000,
originally uploaded by browsermetrics.
Today my car has past the 100K mile mark. It occurred around 8 AM on 695 right under the Stevenson Rd. overpass. You can check the last hundred miles until I reached this mark in my flickr account. Check the set out.

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Wednesday, February 01, 2006
Just upgraded my TiBook to 10.4 (Tiger). The only thing so far not working is my VirtuaDesktop. I hope they have a fix.

Update: CodeTek, the makers of VirtualDesktop, did put out version 3.2 to address the needs of Tiger upgraders.

I have also noticed that things are just a tad slower.
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