Cloudy As Buzzwords
I have many ideas for applications, but most of them seem to rely on similar kinds of infrastructure, in particular a distributed, secure application-level messaging system. Unfortunately, this doesn’t really exist yet, at least not in any form that meets my needs.
What am I talking about here? More colloquially, it’s a mechanism for letting applications all over the network send messages to each other, without requiring a central server, and without allowing messages to be eavesdropped upon or faked.
Let’s take it one buzzword at a time…… MORE
But First, This Brief Message About The End Of The World
Speaking of my projects, here’s a different one that’s actually finished: a new mix entitled The Fall Of The Towers.
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Unstealthing, Incrementally
I got about 14 minutes of fame back in January with a blog post, wherein I grumbled about (among other things) how I disliked Apple’s culture of secrecy, and announced that I’d left Apple to work on my own, unspecified, project. In the intervening three months, I haven’t said anything about what that project is, almost as though it were … secret.
The irony of this is not lost on me.
Admittedly, there are things about my … MORE
On First Installing Adobe’s Photoshop Elements 6
I’ve been waiting eagerly for my pre-ordered copy of Photoshop Elements 6 to arrive. The previous version I had was 2.0(!) which had been balky for a long time and totally lost the will to live (or launch) when I installed Leopard two years ago. Acorn and Pixelmator are nice apps, but they just don’t do everything I need an image editor to do — I don’t mean the “pro” features, rather the labor-saving conveniences … MORE
“Sci-Fi Mavens Offer Far Out Homeland Security Advice!”
Speaking of Arthur C. Clarke, another of his achievements was to live a long life without making a complete ass of himself. A goal we should all emulate, but one that’s eluded too many other SF writers.
For example! Take Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, who, having ceased putting any mental effort into their writing at least 25 years ago, now have the free time, in their dotage, to advise top government officials on … MORE
Japanese Advertisers Discover Zooko’s Triangle
Cabel Sasser, of indie developer Panic, reports from Japan:
“Within minutes of riding on the first trains in Japan, I notice a significant change in advertising, from train to television. The trend? No more printed URLs. The replacement? Search boxes! With recommended search terms!” [*]
He goes on to note how common it is for people to type URLs or domain names into their browser’s search box instead of the address field. To American geeks this … MORE
My Debt To Arthur C. Clarke
Arthur C. Clarke’s death hit me harder than other recent obituaries, even though it’s been decades since I read much by him. His were some of the first science fiction stories I read, at the age of ten or eleven; and for several years after that he was my favorite author.
I remember, during one of our long summer trips visiting the extended family in Germany, finding one of his story collections in the small English-language … MORE
The iPhone Has Blinders On
I bow to my esteemed colleague Craig Hockenberry’s greater experience in iPhone development; but I must disagree with his take on the infeasibility of background applications. He gives two reasons why networked apps shouldn’t run in the background — one technical and one user-interface.
Battery life.
The heart of the problem are the radios. Both the EDGE and Wi-Fi transceivers have significant power requirements. Whenever that hardware is on, your battery life is going to … MORE
The Origin Of The iChat UI
I had lost this historical document for a long time, but finally found it the other day on an old backup CD. It’s the original 1997 sketch I made of a chat user interface based on speech balloons.
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iPhone Developer Rejections Top 10,000
CUPERTINO, California—March 14, 2008—Apple® today announced that more than 10,000 iPhone™ developers have received enigmatically-worded rejection letters for the beta iPhone Developer Program. The iPhone Developer Program provides developers with a complete and integrated process for developing, debugging, and distributing applications for iPhone and iPod touch, complete with real-world testing on iPhone.
“Developer reaction to our email has been incredible with more than 1,000 snarky posts and irate comments on high-profile Mac websites,” said Philip Schiller, … MORE
