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Those Damn Buttons!

Joel talks about Great Design and, um, lack of Great Design… He brings up the Motorola RAZR and it’s on/off keys… Motorola RAZR keypad

Upon first looking at them, I figured the green key was a phone held vertically and the red key was a phone in the “hung up” position. Mind you, the icons look like the old time phones, not a modern mobile phone of today… (Well, sort of, if you stretch the imagination…)

Motorola RAZR keypad This brings up an issue I’ve always wondered about… In my car is a little icon for when the level of fuel gets too low. It looks like a gas pump that existed back around 1970 or so. You know, the kind with the single hose and handle that hangs on the side of the pump. I can’t remember the last time I saw one of those, except maybe in a museum.

It’s the same thing with the icon of an old time oil can, and numerous other examples. I still see systems that use an hourglass to represent having to wait for something. I doubt my kids have ever seen an hourglass, but the know that’s the symbol for “wait, this will take some time…” Do we need to worry about using icons of things that we no longer really use, or that don’t look familiar anymore? Is it just a matter of knowing what the icon currently represents and we should be ok with that? I dunno…

Back to issue of buttons doing things, when I used my Rio 500, I was happy it had a button for volume, and another one for on/off. With the iPod, I often try to turn if off, and it doesn’t seem to work. And the volume is accessible only if you are in the right mode, with that option available. I was happy when I got a Mac keyboard (like the old NeXT keyboard) with a volume control on it, because grabbing a mouse and trying to navigate to a tiny on-screen volume control can be a challenge you don’t need at 3 AM when something comes out of the speakers at full blast…

With the RAZR, I would have guessed as Joel did, that green turned it on, while red turned it off. I can pretend I’m superior with my Nokia, where it has a single button for on/off at the top, but to be honest, I almost never turn it off, because the boot up time is ridiculous. Sure, it’s more computer than phone, but still, I’d rather just change the profile from ‘Normal’ to ‘Silent’ than deal with turning it off and turning it back on. Oh, do you know the easy way to change the profile? Obviously you just push the off (or on) button quickly to change the profile, but don’t hold it down too long, or the phone will turn off, and you’ll be forced to wait for it to go through it’s long boot process to turn it back on.

Some days I feel like we have dozens of modern equivalents to the blinking 12:00 on the VCR‘s of yesteryear…

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Keynote in iTunes?

In a recent email newsletter from Jakob Nielson (no link, since it does not appear to be on the web, ponder than one for a while…) he talks about Steve Jobs’ Macworld keynote, and even makes a joke!

In my last newsletter, I complained about the webcast of Bill Gates’ CES keynote: we didn’t get to hear the speaker until 8 minutes and 57 seconds into the video. Too drawn-out (thus boring) for Web video. In contrast, Apple’s video of Steve Jobs’ recent Macworld keynote had him talking after only 36 seconds of intro. They could have tightened this a bit, but basically, that’s the way to go. The video image was the same size as Microsoft’s (320×180), which is too small to see demos well. For long videos, better quality is needed to keep users’ attention, even when you are webcasting from a reality distortion field.

As for the Macworld keynote, Drew mentioned that it would be a most excellent idea for Apple to make the keynote available via the iTunes Music Store. What Mac-fanatic wouldn’t pay $1.99 to download all the Stevey goodness with “Oh… and one more thing…”? Isn’t it the perfect content for that shiny new video-capable iPod?

What’s up Apple?

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Flickr, Creative Commons, and RSS

Hmmm, this seems weird…

Go to this Flickr page: /photos/tags/water/ and this Flickr page: /creativecommons/by-nc-sa-2.0/tags/water/

The first one, which is all photos tagged with ‘water’ regardless of license, has an RSS feed you can subscribe to. The second one, which has photos tagged with ‘water’ made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 license, does not…

Seems to me that you would want an RSS feed of by-nc-sa license photos, eh?

(Update: I may or may not have heard that RSS feeds for the CC stuff should happen in the future. Yay!)

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1 through 12

You know how you search, and you get a results page and it says something like:

12 results found!
Displaying 1 – 10 of 12

And then you need to go to the second page to see the last two results?

This is due to some programmer deciding (or more likely not deciding) that you should always display a list of 10 items per page, and the last page will have the remainder. Why not just round the number of results properly and display 1 – 12 of 12, or 50 – 66 of 66, etc?

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Geek Entertaintment TV

Yeah, ok, Rocketboom is nice and all, sort of funny in a geeky way, but really, for a true alpha-geek you need more, you need Geek Entertaintment TV.

I know, people go on and on about Amanda this and Amanda that, but she can’t compete with Irina Slutsky.

Geek Entertainment TV

The Macworld Expo 2006 Wrap Up is especially hilarious. ("S. Kelly" indeed!)

I have seen the future of videoblogging/videopodcasting/vlogging… whatever you call it! It’s Geek Entertaintment TV…