Blog

A collection of links, articles and stories.

Blurring of the Lines

Dmitry Fadeyev writes about Windows 8:

The road to a good OS is not a blurring of the lines between PCs and tablets, but rather an amplification of the differences through a strong focus on the uses that each category serves. The desktop OS should make use of large screen real estate and the precise targeting of the mouse cursor. The mobile OS should be optimized for the small screen and for the rough tap of the finger.
It doesn’t make any sense to port a user interface optimized for mobile touch devices to the desktop, and neither does it make sense to give tablet users the desktop interface. Each was custom built for its own environment, and each is optimized to be operated by different methods. In their compromise, what Microsoft are doing now is giving a tablet to people who want to buy a PC, and giving a PC to people who want to buy a tablet. Since there is no hybrid device that works great for everything, there is no point in compromising the experience by designing a hybrid UI.

This is the exact issue I've had with Windows 8 since I first learnt about the approach Microsoft was taking with its design.

Need for Speed: Most Wanted Online Multiplayer Car Guide

If you — like me — have been playing the new Need for Speed game online and have been unable to work out if and when you'd unlock the various cars, here's a great guide.

I've been enjoying the game a good amount, although it reminds me of Burnout Paradise a lot. This isn't necessarily a bad thing overall, it was just a little disappointing.

Hopefully we'll be treated to a new Need for Speed: Underground style game before too long. I love being a pretend boy racer.

Orange Tiny Terror Combo: My Tone

I've had this Tiny Terror Combo (the 12" variety) for a couple of months now and I adore it. I'm working on a full review, but until then, here's a quick preview of some of the tones available through the amp.

My favourite feature of this valve amp is how I can roll back the volume knob on my guitar to get a clean tone. My only previous experience with guitar amps has been with the solid state variety, and boy, this blows them all away.

Throughout this entire recording, the only effects I use are a Cry Baby Wah pedal (you'll be able to figure out where that kicks in) and a BOSS Blues Driver pedal for some extra punch. I only use the Blues Driver pedal for a small section around the Muse-esque part of the following recording. Almost all of the recording was solely with the amp, and different settings on my Ibanez guitar.

I hope you can excuse both my awful playing and the not-so-great quality of this recording. Believe it or not, this was recorded on my iPhone 5. I'm planning to pick up a more professional microphone in the coming months, but this will have to do for now.

These are the settings on the amp. I didn't change any throughout the entire recording. I've experimented a lot, but find that these work best for me.

If you're looking for a more in-depth look at Orange amps (or anything guitar related), I highly recommend RobChappers' YouTube channel. Especially this Orange Tiny Terror series video and this Jim Root Dark Terror video. The audio in RobChappers' well-produced reviews is much higher quality than mine.

“Disappointing Usability for Both Novice and Power Users”

Jakob Nielsen writes a thoughtful criticism of Windows 8 from a usability perspective, highlighting some of the issues the new design paradigms introduce. The points he raises mirror my main concerns. It's a long article, so Jakob's summary is handy:

Hidden features, reduced discoverability, cognitive overhead from dual environments, and reduced power from a single-window UI and low information density. Too bad.
A Collection of Beautiful iOS app icons

If you're the kind of person who judges apps by their icons, this resource will likely become an awesome (yet expensive) favourite place to visit. It's a great way to discover new apps, too.

I love being able to downsize the icons, so I can see a lot of apps on the screen at once. Not knowing what the apps do, yet still having to judge based solely off an icon is a great challenge.

The Efficiency Obsession

Jordan writes another great piece for The Industry, this time focusing on efficiency and why it isn't always what our goal in life should be:

Efficiency is just a means to an end, not an end unto itself. It would be foolish to set a life goal of just living more efficiently — that would make us no better than glorified machines. Instead, we try to lead lives that are more meaningful, fulfilling, edifying, productive. Efficiency can help enable us to do those things, but it can’t replace them.

One should look upon life as a piece of music: we don't listen to music to get to the finale — we listen to music for the journey. Life isn't a path towards a goal, it's a steady journey we should strive to enjoy.

Colour Photographs from WWII

Visual News has some very rare photographs taken during WWII. But they're in colour. There's also a larger selection which can be found at the US Library of Congress, but it's pretty daunting to browse.

When viewing really old photos, we're usually reminded of their age by the poor quality and lack of colour. These photos look strangely modern; as if taken with Instagram, today. This modern feel injects new emotion into the images, which is a strange sensation considering the era in which they were taken.

Compromise, iPad mini and MacBook Air

Fraser Speirs just wrote up some thoughts about his iPad mini. A section in his article stood out to me: where he discusses the inherent compromises in a first generation product: something I have been thinking about recently.

The iPad mini reminds me of my first MacBook Air. When the Air first shipped it was a Mac with some serious technical compromises with a design and form factor so compelling that you would re-arrange your entire digital life to make it work. The iPad mini reminds me of that except that it only has one serious compromise: the non-retina display. In every other respect, it's a full-bore iPad.

The MacBook Air is the most popular Mac. Does that mean the iPad mini will be the most popular iPad?

Organisation plans to buy debt from banks, won't collect it

Nobody likes debt.

A new, charitable organisation called Strike Debt hates debt so much that they're planning to do something very unique to combat it. It's a common practice for banks to sell debt onto third parties, so they don't have to collect the debt themselves.

Strike Debt will buy debts from banks with money received from donations, but it won't collect them.

The genius of this idea is compounded by the fact that Rolling Jubilee, a Strike Debt project, will buy debts for a fraction of their real value: meaning the $320,000 raised so far will pay off over $6,000,000 in debt.

Sounds like a great way to make a charitable donation 20 times more valuable.

Like a Whisper

Public broadcasting is a balance. It’s a balance between not getting your message across to an audience at all and spamming your message so loudly that its demand for attention becomes deafening and is ignored altogether.

I feel I haven't been broadcasting Chasing Perfection articles optimally. I’m making some changes to how I broadcast articles today, and I think you’ll like them. When I share my writing, I don’t want to yell out like an entitled child; I want to unveil my very own work of art.

The more you shout, the fewer listen.

A new entry is added to Chasing Perfection about once a day. Sometimes more, sometimes less. Due to this infrequent-esque posting schedule (and the relative timelessness of articles), I often feel I should share new entries to twitter more than once — after all, twitter is where most of my audience resides (and not everyone reads every tweet in their timeline). Mentioning an article more than once would increase the chances of each follower seeing and enjoying the articles.

Unfortunately, the caveat here is that some people do read every tweet. For those people, seeing the same article mentioned by the same individual multiple times would surely become tiresome very quickly. I don’t want to annoy or spam my followers, so this seems far from ideal.

There is a Chasing Perfection twitter account which tweets a link to every new entry, and there’s my personal twitter account, which tweets on no particular schedule.

My new strategy for sharing articles is to make further use of retweets: my personal twitter account will share tweets from the CP account. I will not abide by a strict policy; not all will be shared, but most certainly will. My judgement will come into play here. The main reason for this is that the retweets will only be seen by those who do not already follow the CP account. For someone who does follow the CP account and my personal account, there will be no repeated tweets.

The second prong of this new approach is creating a tweet-sized description of each article. That description, along with a link to the article in question, will be tweeted from my personal account. These “tease-tweets” will act as a blurb; individually crafted to provide new value even to those who have read the article already.

The problem with retweets is that they’re endorsements of something else, rather than statements by the retweeter. A viewer of a retweet sees the username and avatar of the retweetee, with only a small mention of the retweeter. Interestingly, this is similar to how twitter displays adverts.

I feel it is important to tweet both from my own account — a “tease-tweet”, if you will — and to retweet the CP account. The personal tweet and the retweet contain different content. The personal tweet has my avatar next to it and doesn’t look at all like an advert. This makes the link appear more trustworthy and of higher quality. The CP retweet will appear to be more “adverty”, but is also a statement from me: “If you like my writing, why not follow the CP twitter account?”

Getting a broadcasting balance just right is hard. These changes should hopefully improve my own balance without annoying followers, repeatedly saying the same thing, or shouting.

I’ll whisper more and shout less.