April 30, 2011

Things that the iPad really needs.

A few months ago I got an iPad. When they were first released, I like a lot of people looked on them with a doubtful “really?” considering them to be nothing more than a giant iPod touch. When a guy I know bought one on a whim I got a chance to really use one for more than five minutes in an Apple store and my opinion did a total 180°. It all made sense. Using the large touch screen simply feels like the most natural way to use a computer. Instead of interacting with a device which moves a cursor which then interacts with a UI element, you just interact with the UI directly.

continue reading Things that the iPad really needs.

April 14, 2011

Thoughts on Tweetbot

At some point during the night of the 13th of April, iPhone app kings Tapbots launched their long-awaited twitter client, Tweetbot. Having purchased other apps by Tapbots (Calcbot and Convertbot) and been more than a little bit satisfied, I downloaded Tweetbot first thing Thursday morning and removed Twitter for iPhone from my home screen. What follows are my initial thoughts after using the app for a day.

continue reading Thoughts on Tweetbot

July 12, 2010

Geek-up in the Steel City

So I went to Sheffield with Rick on Saturday to get some coffee and meet up with Ash. It actually turned into a pretty cool impromptu geek-up with Mark coming along with Ash and then Chris joining us in town shortly after. Here are some photographs I took using my iTelephone. Enjoy.

continue reading Geek-up in the Steel City

June 29, 2010

Are we too quick to label people “stupid”?

Just a quick one today in response to Andy Clarke’s tweet about strangers on a train wanting to play with his iPad. It got me thinking about how quick we web people are to label average Joe as stupid because he or she isn’t as quick to pick up technological stuff as we are. First, though, a couple of points. I hold Mr. Clarke in the highest esteem. I’ve followed his work for years and even seen him speak about his craft. As such this isn’t a personal dig, it was simply his comment that lead me to write this. Secondly, I know I am guilty of doing this; I’m not saying I’m innocent. Hell, anyone who knows me knows damn well I am the most judgemental and cynical of bastards. I need to change, too.

continue reading Are we too quick to label people “stupid”?

May 18, 2010

All the phones I’ve ever had

Just for fun, I want to give you my personal mobile phone history. Good or bad; this is every mobile I’ve ever owned.

I had to rack my brains and do some serious internet combing to find model numbers and pictures of them all but I think I’ve documented them fairly well. So have a read… if you’re a total nerd like me.

continue reading All the phones I’ve ever had

May 14, 2010

Come on, Tesco. Finish what you started.

If you’re an iPhone user then you’ve probably at least heard about the Tesco clubcard app. The simple app displays a scannable barcode that you can use instead of your full sized wallet clubcard or mini, car keys version. Great, right? Well yeah, for what it’s worth it’s pretty good (even though it only scans on the newest in-store barcode readers). But I think they’ve missed several tricks that would have made it an absolute blinder of an app.

continue reading Come on, Tesco. Finish what you started.

April 29, 2010

Thoughts on DIBI

Yesterday I made the trip up to Gateshead (Newcastle) for the first ever DIBI web conference. I’d never been to any kind of industry conference before and needless to say, it was one hell of an experience.
continue reading Thoughts on DIBI

March 30, 2010

8 second industry-fucks

You know what pisses me off? Microsoft adverts. Seriously they all reek of clueless grandad trying to be “cool” and, well, they’re just annoying as crap. But the series of ads for Internet Explorer 8 have really burried the needle on my bullshit-o-meter. As I may have mentioned in a previous post (I can’t remember) I’m a firm believer in educating the dullards over dumbing down the tools to suit the lowest common denominator. IE8, more specifically the adverts for IE8, as such play jump-rope with my last nerve!

continue reading 8 second industry-fucks

February 3, 2010

I want to write a book… Kind of.

Well maybe book is a bit ambitious. Perhaps one day it could become a book but for now I’d settle for any kind of published media. I could do it on this blog but I’d like to keep this focused on movies and some tech. Also once it’s finished I don’t want it to become buried in other content as and when I publish it. So maybe a new website all together…

continue reading I want to write a book… Kind of.

October 15, 2009

Holy shit, this is awesome!

So far the closest thing we’ve had to TV on iPhone is down-loadable episodes of our favourite shows or the venerable BBC iPlayer. Both of these are pretty good solutions but neither are actually television. Today I was pointed in the direction of TVCatchup for the iPhone by a tweet from Paul Stanton. I was expecting to see some half arsed excuse for TV streaming or some hacked pirate looking on demand service. What I got, however scored a 12 on my awesomeness scale of 1 to 10.

continue reading Holy shit, this is awesome!

August 24, 2009

Is Twitter killing Hollywood Movies? A Response.

Today my friend, Dennis posted an article on his site The Beta News about how movie studio fat cats see twitter as detrimental to the movie industry. They are concerned that people are instantly coming out of a screening and tweeting their, often negative, opinions on the movie and this is acting as a catalyst for bad publicity. Where before you’d have to pick up a newspaper or a copy of Empire to read about the latest movies, now you have short, sharp opinions hand delivered to you in your Twitter feed. What used to happen in days or weeks is now happening in minutes. But is this actually bad for the movie industry? I don’t think so.

continue reading Is Twitter killing Hollywood Movies? A Response.

August 19, 2009

Computer Literacy in the Workplace

In case you hadn’t noticed, we’re in a global recession. People are losing their jobs left and right due to cut backs and companies folding. These are often skilled people who would be an asset to any company who could afford to have them on staff. Although it upsets me that these people are losing their jobs, what is starting to get me more and more riled up is the number of people in jobs that they don’t have the skills or competency level to do as effectively as someone else who is potentially out of work. People in office jobs that require them to use a computer every single day often have computer literacy levels FAR below what should be required.

continue reading Computer Literacy in the Workplace

August 5, 2009

Top 5 Rules for good online communication.

There are so many ways to communicate online. E-Mail, twitter, Facebook, Forums, Blog comment threads and instant messaging all with their own set of accepted standards and unspoken rules for etiquette. It would be easy for the uneducated to commit a dreadful faux pas and embarrass themselves or offend the other party. So behold my 5 golden rules for good Internet communication. You can apply these to pretty much all of the above.

continue reading Top 5 Rules for good online communication.

July 8, 2009

Thoughts on password masking.

I’ve seen a couple of blog posts in the last few weeks on the subject of password masking. Jakob Nielsen’s post entitled Stop Password Masking makes a case for dropping the accepted standard that sees password fields blanked out by a line of bullets or asterisks. Nielsen claims that the security benefits are small at best and the impact on accessibility and usability is huge.

continue reading Thoughts on password masking.

July 6, 2009

Holiday, moving and more!

Personal post time! :) It’s been a long time coming, mainly because I’m not very interesting, but now I’ve got a bunch of good stuff to write up. Over the last few months I’ve been up to a whole bunch of stuff! I’ve been on holiday (well, short break), I’ve been to Santa Pod for Jap Show and most important of all; Nat and I have got our first proper place together!!

continue reading Holiday, moving and more!

May 18, 2009

Managing my finances with Google Docs

I’ve always been fairly good with money. I very rarely impulse buy and feel a cold sweat come over me if I dip into my agreed overdraft. One area of personal finance where I do fall down, however is organisation. I’m pretty terrible at setting budgets and savings targets and use my debit card to pay for things waaaay more often than I should. So, with a house move imminent, and the bad taste of a card fraud/bank fuck-up still in my mouth, I thought it was about time I got myself into check with the whole thing and began a search for a free personal finance management app.

continue reading Managing my finances with Google Docs

May 12, 2009

IE6Update: Who watches the watchmen?

Righty-oh, here goes. Since my post about building the web for non-techies I’ve come across a reasonably intense and high-profile debate about a new-ish service that has become available for web designers and developers. IE6Update is a small script that detects if the user is browsing with IE6 and prompts them to upgrade. No problem there, right? Well on the face of it there isn’t. Believe you, me, I’d love nothing more than to see IE6 go the way of smallpox. What IE6Update does, however is sneaky and arguably very wrong and underhanded.

continue reading IE6Update: Who watches the watchmen?

April 28, 2009

5 utilities I cannot live without

We all have our own preferences when it comes to using our computers. Weather you’re a Windows, Mac or Linux user there will be applications and utilities that you use every day and probably take for granted. I’m not really talking about big money apps like Photoshop and Illustrator. I mean the little utilities and widgets that you have running in the background or browser plugins that you use in every day browsing. Well here are my top 5.

continue reading 5 utilities I cannot live without

March 12, 2009

New iPod Shuffle – The ridiculousest iPod ever.

I like Apple. Well, let me clarify; I appreciate what apple do. They provide beautiful, well made products that, on the most part, perform at levels well above the most popular competitors. But there are two things that the company does that really grind my gears. One is the fact that they charge absolutely insane amounts for a lot of their products, (You can spec up a MacPro for over £16,000 that won’t be as fast as an £8000 PC) and the other is when they pull the kind of shit they have with the new iPod Shuffle.

continue reading New iPod Shuffle – The ridiculousest iPod ever.

February 11, 2009

Why Twitter won’t rot… like MySpace.

With a growing number of celebrity sign-ups, Twitter is well and truly taking off (in a way I didn’t expect at first) and this has led to many people fearing for the great service’s integrity. Will it become a bloated, meaningless “Who has the longest dick (the most friends)” sort of social network… you know, like MySpace? Well I don’t think it will, or can, ever happen. Let me explain why.

continue reading Why Twitter won’t rot… like MySpace.

December 1, 2008

Skillz dat killz!

In case you haven’t been paying attention, we appear to be in a recession, and during these hard times it can’t hurt to work on the old skill set and diversify a little so that’s exactly what I’ve been doing. If you’ve been following over the past few months I’ve taught myself how to build a WordPress theme and have actually recently done one as a freelance job. Now however, I thought it was time to turn my hand to something else. When it comes down to it, building a WordPress theme isn’t much more than coding an xHTML and CSS website so I wanted to learn something a bit more… you know, scripty.

continue reading Skillz dat killz!

October 3, 2008

Giving them what they paid for: A (sort of) follow-up.

In my last post I discussed a particular web design company’s lack of standards compliance and broke down, why I thought that, although they were cheap, they didn’t offer value for money. This time, I’m going to look at the same issue but from the other side. As a designer, you want to give your client the best but at the same time you don’t want to sell yourself short. Of course there are standards that, no matter what the project, you need to stick to… text alternatives to images, always declaring a doctype, these are fundamentals. But published guidelines can get very very picky and sticking to them 100%… well, it can be a bitch. How far is it feasible to take it?

continue reading Giving them what they paid for: A (sort of) follow-up.

September 23, 2008

Getting What you pay for: A (sort of) case study.

So the other day, the local paper came through my door and, being bored, I gave it a quick glance. On the front page, amidst a story of a brave tom cat being involved in some sort of gun based ordeal, I noticed a large full colour advert for a local web design company offering “professional” websites for small-medium businesses for as little as £200! I instantly jumped online and looked at the company’s site, websiteportfolio.co.uk and saw pretty much straight away why the prices were so low.

continue reading Getting What you pay for: A (sort of) case study.

September 19, 2008

Photos on iPod… GRRRRRR!!!

On the whole I like the way you manage media on your ipod using iTunes. It’s a pretty simple drag and drop affair for music, podcasts videos and playlists… However, I find myself totally frustrated at how photos are handled! You can’t just drag a bunch of photos to your iPod… oh no… you have to go through a very unintuitive sync process. That’s not the worst part though. What I want to use the photo functionality for is to take my favourite shots from my recent outings away with me to show my friends down the pub. I don’t want to keep a full library of photos on there. Once I have some new ones, I want to take the old ones off and put the new ones on. Simple. But because of the needlessly convoluted method of syncing, the easiest way I’ve found to do this is to create a folder called ipod or something and put my latest photos in there for syncing and remove them when I’m done. This way, the next time I sync it will overwrite the photos on the ipod with the empty folder or any new images that I’ve put in there.

continue reading Photos on iPod… GRRRRRR!!!

August 6, 2008

An Apple product with Windows issues?

You heard right… Apple, a company that can seemingly do no wrong at the moment might have hit a snag with the iPhone 3G (More specifically, the newest iPhone software and it’s “support for third party apps”). Problem is it’s a snag that Microsoft has all but eliminated from Windows for the past six or seven years. Of course this is just speculation on my part but to be honest, if it looks like tuna, smells like tuna and tastes like tuna… it’s probably tuna. I’m talking about DLL hell.

continue reading An Apple product with Windows issues?

July 12, 2008

Back to the kitchen! I smell somethin’ burnin!

I’ve not blogged in ages, sorry about that. Main reason is I’ve been putting a lot of my time into something pretty special and blog related. That’s right, I’m working on a total re-design. In the past what I’ve done is grabbed a pretty generic looking theme with decent web standards and built on that because I felt that it was a quick and easy way of getting nice looking results… also, I was pretty new to WordPress and didn’t know it all that well. What I’m doing this time, however, is build the whole theme from scratch by building a working XHTML template and then putting in all the bits that WordPress needs after.

continue reading Back to the kitchen! I smell somethin’ burnin!

June 12, 2008

The 3G iPhone, should I get one?

So next month sees the release of Apple’s iPhone 2.0 with improved software, slimmer profile and other various improvements such as 3G and GPS. Now, as you may know, I’ve been sceptical of the iPhone and seriously slated version 1 for it’s price and kind of dated features. This time however Apple, and mobile networks seem to be doing something to combat the high cost of ownership to shift more of the already record-breaking device. O2, the UK’s only iPhone carrying network have slashed prices and will offer the phone free to high rollers on the £75 contract and a pretty reasonable £99 for lesser tariffs, a massive change from the shocking £269 price tag of the first iPhone. This is especially good when you consider this is still an 18 month contract. Compare that to what Canadian network Rogers plan to do by introducing the iPhone on a ridiculous 36 month term! Another carrot O2 are dangling in front of consumers is the promise of free unlimited data on all tariffs (subject to their fair usage policy) as well as free wi-fi access to thousands of TheCloud and BT OpenZone hot-spots across the country. But is all this enough to make me buy my first Apple product?

continue reading The 3G iPhone, should I get one?

April 29, 2008

Robots and Roadside Bagpipers

Last week I decided to take Thursday and Friday off work so Nat and I could have a nice 4 day weekend together. Not done it in a while and because Nat works on Saturday evenings we don’t tend to have much of a weekend together. Also, as it was both of our pay days on Friday we figured it would be a good time to do it.

continue reading Robots and Roadside Bagpipers

November 10, 2007

iPhone, the super-model of smartphones.

recently it seems that not a month goes by where there isn’t an earth-shattering piece of new technology hitting the stores after a biblical amount of hype. The Nintendo wii, the PS3 and most recently, Apple’s long-awaited iPhone. It’s arrival might not have been as hugely anticipated as the PS3 and it surely won’t remain perpetually out of stock like the Wii but for a mobile phone, this amount of hype is truly unprecedented.

continue reading iPhone, the super-model of smartphones.

October 23, 2007

TV Links get taken down to China-Town!!

Over the last few years loads of sites have popped up on the web offering links to the latest episodes of your favourite TV shows and to new movies (some of which have yet to see a worldwide cinema release.) I’m talking about stuff like peekvid.

In the past weeks however one of the UK’s favourites, TVlinks.co.uk has been shut down by FACT working with the Gloucestershire police and trading standards authority. The individual who owns the site, a 26 year old man from Cheltenham, has been arrested on charges relating to the facilitating of copyright infringement. These charges are brought despite the man having hosted no media on his own servers and also giving a disclaimer saying he has no responsibility for media he links to. continue reading TV Links get taken down to China-Town!!

February 13, 2007

Windows Vista: Paranoid Schizophrenic Edition.

Well, I got my hands on Windows Vista for the first time today and it’s the Ultimate (fat cat) edition at £340 – Retail, £223 – Upgrade and £123 – OEM which includes the full array of features that Microsoft have taken it upon themselves to restrict in other versions, seemingly making the descision of what we do in our homes and ofices for us. Nice one Microsoft.

So I boot it up and I have to say the initial set up is a lot less complicated than in previous versions which seems nice. All I had to do was confirm time zones, keyboard layout and system locale and tell it the name of the initial user. Easy. Then came an unsettlingly long wait while “Windows detected my computer’s performance” The machine is a Dual core 2.66Ghz machine with a, not small, 2GB of RAM as well as a, not too shabby, ATI graphics card. Vista gave it a performance score of 4.2. I have yet to see if that’s good or not as it gives you no sort of benchmark. You’d think however that this was more than enough clout to power through the post-install setup of an OS.

When I finally got to the desktop I was pleasently surprised by how little the new glass effect GUI bothered me. I thought it would distract me far too much from the tasks I was attempting to do. Another nice feature is how you can quickly and easily set the size of things like icons to give people with poor eyesight the benefit of large icons and text without the disadvantages of taking your nice new TFT screen away from it’s native resolution. However, it was when I first started playing with these settings I discovered the biggest annoyance so far; Windows’ paranoia. You change a setting, windows asks you permission. You run a program (that hasn’t been made by Microsoft) and it asks you permission. Heaven forbid you should start an application that accesses the network or the Internet, because if you do that you are bombarded with fear mongering messages of how hackers might damage your PC or your data or how you might be susceptible to viruses or spyware.

I can see what MS is trying to do here and it’s a noble cause. I can only imagine but I would bet that the majority of virus infections on home or small office PCs is a direct result of the user not being aware of what they are doing and clicking on dodgy links etc. How they are dealing with it though concerns me greatly. You would think that Microsoft would want to invite more and more people to feel comfortable using their computers without the worry of online fraud, phishing and spyware. Throwing warnings and messages in their face at every turn telling them how vulnerable they are to such threats just seems like a very quick way of putting off inexperienced users and, to not put too fine a point on it, pissing off the experienced ones. I just think they should have spent more time making the OS intelligent against such threats so it could handle it’s business behind the scenes and not continually bother the user by asking for permission for every program to run.

Now, I have managed to turn off the UAC (User Account Control) feature that asks for your permission each time you change a setting and this has stopped a lot of the annoying messages, however I did have to delve quite deep into the control panel to access this control and for inexperienced users this could well be too taxing. I can only hope that over the next few days of using Vista it does learn my habits and pick up on what is and isn’t a threat and stop bugging me so much.

Vista has been sold as the best, most user friendly Windows experience to date and in many ways this is true. The eye-pleasing new GUI and more intuative ways of carrying out common tasks such as live previews on alt+tab and the, oh-so-swanky, flip3D and sidebar make your day to day operations seem more pleasurable but, for me anyway, these are overshadowed by this overwhelming paranoia. It does it’s job of protecting the user from him/herself but I think it could do it in a much less annoying way. For example one of the first tests I carried out on the PC was installing a piece of bespoke software to see if it would install and run correctly on vista. One of the stipulations of the install is that the config.nt file in system 32 had to be edited. Opening the file for editing was fine, nice and easy but when I went to save it I was hit over and over again with a message saying “cannot create C:\windows\system32\config.nt check file name and path….” Althoguh it told me nothing of the sort, this was another one of Vista’s new idiosyncrasies at work. In the end I had to save a copy to the desk top and then, using explorer move the file into system32 and overwrite the original. You can imagine what windows said to me when I suggested this move! “Don’t do that, it’s dangerous!” and “I need your permission to do that!” It all just seems silly to me.

While on the subject of security, Microsoft have made domain logon more secure but in my oppinion they’ve butchered it in the process. The interface is ugly and it all seems a bit like an afterthought. Where previous versions had a nice tidy window with “Press Ctrl+Alt+Del to logon” and an option to find out more about this, Vista just has some nasty jagged text in the middle of a splash screen saying it. When you get past this screen you are presented with your account avatar and a password box. If you want to change user you need to, first click “Switch User” then if you want that user to be on a domain other than the local machine you now need to type  “domain/username” seems a little rushed. But thats just my opinion.

I have yet to see what neurological disorder MS Office 2007 is afflicted with. Bets on Tourette’s Syndrome anyone?

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