Archive for September 17th, 2007

Toilet Museum

You need to be prepared to clean up a few messes, or at least that’s what the operator of a new toilet museum in Kiev, Ukraine found. A 46 year old local man, after paying his entry fee, walked over to one of the exhibits and left the museum its first non-cash donation.

When asked about his rationale, he stated:


“I didn’t realise they were only to look at when I was caught short. They told me afterwards visitors are supposed to use the public toilets on the street. I told them I want my money back.”

In response, the museum has put “Not for use” signs on all exhibits. No word on whether the depositor received his money back, or if they kept his donation as a permanent exhibit.

News Link (ananova) ( Thanks prying1!), and Pic Link (the pic is actually a museum in Austria, same idea though).

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a plastic container of cheap nachos
When I was a kid, my dad and a couple of his friends had season tickets to see the Portland State Vikings. I would frequently go along even though I had very little interest in football. I was there pure and simply for the food. For the nachos and the popcorn, the hot chocolate and the ice cream. We didn’t get much in the way of junk food in my house, but my dad was always willing to shell out for a few treats at the game.

The Wachovia Center in Philadelphia is offering a deal that would have mightily appealed to my young self. They are selling “all you can eat” packages for Flyers and 76ers games that includes hot dogs, soft drinks, popcorn, nacho chips and salsa. Not particularly good for the waistline but very nice for the fans of the junk food.

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Off the back of my esteemed colleague’s recap of why he loves his Mac so much, I thought I’d offer a competing view.

OK, so I’m not actually advocating that you throw your Mac out the window. The thing’s not completely biodegradable yet, and you could always use it as a monitor stand. Besides, there might be somebody walking by (unless that somebody is Steve Jobs, and then, by all means — give it the old heave-ho).

But I do think, in light of all the praise that is heaped on OS X for being time-saving, intuitive and just plain pretty, it’s worth exploring some of the aspects of the user interface that the Mac gets plain wrong. My biggest gripe is with an element of the interface that is pretty darned fundamental — keyboard shortcuts.

Disclaimer: I am both a Mac and a PC user, and have been for a long time. Here’s my beef.

On Windows, keyboard shortcuts within an application:

  1. provide complete coverage
  2. are easily discoverable
  3. are intuitive
  4. are consistent, and
  5. generally don’t step on each other’s toes

My experience with OS X has led me to the conclusion that keyboard shortcuts in Mac apps are none of the above. Let me illustrate my point by looking at common commands in some popular applications.

Let’s first look at Adobe Photoshop.

On my PC, executing the Image > Image Size command is pretty quick (just three keys):

ALT-CTRL-I

A similar shortcut is also available on the Mac:

Cmd-Option-I

So far, we have a pretty level playing field. Personally, though, I’m not a fan of having to hold down three keys at once, and prefer an alternative way to execute this command from the keyboard, which I’ll get to in a moment.

So what if I wanted to make use of one of the other items on the Image menu? For example, the Crop function (a command that I use regularly when preparing screen shots for our books).

If we take a look at the dropdown menu, you’ll see that on both platforms, there is no designated keyboard shortcut listed. In this scenario, we’re left to the mercy of the operating system to step up and make things easier for us.A comparison of Photoshop's Image dropdown menu, as viewed in Windows and on a Mac

Windows comes to the party by allowing the user to hold down the ALT key. Doing so highlights the keys that can be pressed to trigger each menu item:

ALT-I, P

That P is a little misleading the first time round, as one would intuitively think that the Crop menu item would be executed by a C. However, as the C key has already been claimed by another option on the same menu, this is a reasonably elegant compromise. Because the key is underlined when we hold down ALT, we can tell at a glance what the shortcut is, and execute it, all in the one motion.

Not so for OS X.

On a Mac you have four options:

  1. use the OS-provided keystrokes to navigate the menu (Ctrl-F2, I, Enter, C, C, Enter)
  2. apply your own keyboard shortcuts at the OS-level
  3. record a macro to perform this function (massive overkill for such a simple function)
  4. use the mouse

None of these are particularly palatable, given the number of menu items that fall into this category. Option number 1 is exacerbated for me, as I own a MacBook that requires me to type Fn-Ctrl-F2 due to the laptop’s compact keyboard. There’s just no way that someone can be expected to type Fn-Ctrl-F2 quickly with one hand.

Which brings me to my next bugbear: conflicts. Take Photoshop and OS X’s built-in document search, Spotlight. Both applications make use of the Cmd-Space combination: for Spotlight, Cmd-Space is the keystroke to search your desktop for emails, pictures and documents. In Photoshop, it’s the command to zoom in on your document. In fact, this is the command to zoom in for every Adobe program!

I can’t begin to tell you how annoyed I have become at having the Spotlight search bar appear every time I’ve wanted to zoom in on a Photoshop image, an Illustrator graphic or a PDF in Reader. Sure, sometimes it works (if you remember to hold down Space and then press Cmd, you can avoid this annoying conflict) and you can remap these keystrokes, but why on earth haven’t Adobe and Apple resolved them yet as the default option?

Which brings me to consistency.

Some of the applications that I use the most on my Mac are Java applications. For native Cocoa applications, cursor navigation using Cmd- and Option- with the arrow keys is completely different from cursor navigation inside a Java app. The fact that this fundamental mode of navigation a document or highlighting text is not consistent simply baffles me, and I curse every time I launch a Java application at having to reprogram my mode of thinking just to select text or move up and down the page. I don’t know whether this is OS X’s fault, Sun’s fault or the individual application developer’s fault, but the fact is that it is an issue for every Java application that I use on the Mac.

Yes, there’s no doubt OS X is pretty. It’s stable. It’s all that. Except if you rely on the keyboard to be more productive — something that is absolutely crucial for a power user like myself.

Keyboard shortcuts can make an application more accessible to disabled users, and more usable to able-bodied users. And in these stakes, Windows rubs the Mac’s nose in the dirt, using only a couple of deft keystrokes, and not even Quicksilver can save it.

Join the discussion “Mac vs. PC and the Future of the Web” in the SitePoint Forums

This article provided by sitepoint.com.

Offline Gmail coming?

Word on the street has it that there will be an offline Gmail version in the near future, powered by Google Gears. For those not in the know, Google Gears is an open source browser extension which makes it possible for developers to take their web applications offline where it makes sense. To date, Google Reader is the only service taking advantage of Gears, but it makes perfect sense to include an offline component for Gmail. Heck, why not throw in Google Docs, Picasa Web, and Blogger at the same time? Just make sure you have at least 3GB of additional storage space per Gmail address. Should this materialize, do you think business users will migrate to offline Gmail or stick to clients like Outlook?

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Google's Moon Shot

It wasn’t all that long ago — just about three years — that aerospace engineer Burt Rutan and his company, Scaled Composites, won the $10 million Ansari X PRIZE for being the first private corporation to reliably launch a manned spacecraft twice in two weeks. It was a monumental achievement, but it turns out that the X PRIZE Foundation that awarded the $10 million exists solely to “create radical breakthroughs for the benefit of humanity,” according to its Web site. This means it organizes contests for everything from space firsts to genome-sequencing contests.

Now, Google has announced that it is raising the stakes on a new contest. The search giant will chip in an additional $20 million on top of the X PRIZE’s $10 million for the Google Lunar X PRIZE, which will be awarded to the first private company to launch a probe that lands on the moon.

But just getting to the moon won’t be enough. Assuming competitors’ probes survive the landing, they will also need to move at least 500 meters under their own power and send back high-resolution images of whatever they see. This added task makes sense for Google, which an has an app called Google Moon that lets you gaze upon the portions of the lunar surface explored by astronauts in the ’60s and ’70s. Unfortunately, Google Moon’s images are low-res by Google stanards, which is where the lunar probe comes in. The probes will map the moon the same way Google has mapped the streets of New York City and San Francisco for Google Earth, but with something that’s a bit more high-tech.

From ‘USA Today’

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Electronic Arts might be making their most violent attempt to turn around their sloppy image in what Game Informer introduces as “the most chilling sci-fi horror experience the world has ever seen.” Obviously, they want people to get interested in EA’s new survival horror franchise, Dead Space. This is, of course, the opposite of Alive Space, which gives children candy and helps astronauts reach those bolts that float out into the vastness of itself. So we can expect something fairly evil for the dead version of space.

Details are coming soon, but as for now, we’ve got nothing on it. Our issue of Game Informer will roll around eventually, but we’d like something to tell you now. Game Informer’s website tells us that if we loved the movie Event Horizon, or horror films, we’ll love this game. We’ll judge that statement later, but we’re glad to see a new horror franchise enter. That way, we can choose between more than Silent Hill, Fatal Frame, Resident Evil, and Condemned. Well, maybe we’ll get another Siren game in the future, but probably not.

[via CVG]

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The New York Times [registration required] reports that Dave Stolte took his Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPhone to Ireland and England in July and returned home to a little surprise — a bill for $3,000.

Stolte’s $3,000 phone bill was a result of unanticipated European roaming charges. Consider the case of mortgage consultant, Neil Dingman. Dingman used his iPhone only a few times on a European trip this summer and had expected to see just a small increase in his next bill for roaming charges. But he failed to turn off an iPhone feature that automatically checks e-mail. Thus his iPhone roamed over networks in Italy, Croatia and Malta more than 500 times. And he ended up with $852.31 in roaming charges.

But Stolte’s story has a happy ending. Thanks to the posting of Stolte’s bill on the Internet, AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T) went from giving him a $100 credit to full credit for that $3,000 iPhone bill. The lessons? Turn off the e-mail checking feature if you’re out of the U.S. And if you get a ginormous iPhone bill — post a complaint video on Google Inc.’s (NASDAQ: GOOG) YouTube.

Peter Cohan is President of Peter S. Cohan & Associates. He also teaches management at Babson College and edits The Cohan Letter. He has no financial interest in the stocks mentioned.

 

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Well just like the software emulation-only backwards compatibility that has followed the PlayStation 3 out of Europe, so too has the ol’ online compat checker crossed the pond to helpfully inform you of the glitches you can expect in your favorite classic titles if you pick up the new 80GB SKU — this might be one case where the early adopters really did get a better deal.

[Via Joystiq]

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

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If there was ever a song that had to be played in a specific trailer, it was Black Sabbath’s “Iron Man” that had to be played in the spot for Paramount and Marvel’s Iron Man. Well, Apple has the first trailer up — apparently a good 12 hours earlier than planned — with the appropriate tune and far more footage than I could have hoped for. For something called a teaser trailer, it shows us a lot: a fairly comprehensive montage of the first act; a battle scene in which Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) wears his first Iron Man suit; the final suit and a cool flight sequence in which it is showcased. Plus, there’s jokes. Myspace jokes, gang sign jokes, Da Vinci jokes. It is obvious that Robert Downey Jr. was the right choice for the lead. Of course, as it is technically a teaser, we don’t see more than a few quick shots each of Gwyneth Paltrow, Terrence Howard and Jeff Bridges (bald and Malovichy!). But I think they also accidentally slipped in a party shot from Downey’s Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.

I have to admit for the umpteenth time that I never cared for Iron Man in the comics, but in the movie he looks pretty cool. For those of you who aren’t familiar with the character, Tony Stark is a millionaire weapons maker who develops an armored suit, which he uses to fight crime as Iron Man. Paltrow plays Stark’s secretary/love interest, Pepper Pots. Howard plays Stark’s best friend and future superhero, Jim Rhodes (aka War Machine). As the villain, Bridges plays Stark’s rival, Obadiah Stane. Also in the film are Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury, Hilary Swank, Ghostface Killer and, of course, Stan Lee. The comic book adaptation was written by Arthur Marcum & Matt Holloway and Children of Men scribes Mark Fergus and Hawk Ostby and it was directed by Jon Favreau (Elf). Iron Man hits theaters May 2, 2008.

Update: It seems Apple may have realized their error in putting the trailer up too early, because the Quicktime pages no longer seem to be working. Check out tonight’s episode of The Hills on MTV in order to see the trailer, or wait for tomorrow to see it online. Meanwhile, you can see some screen caps from the trailer on MajorSpoilers.com.

Update II: Forget the first update. Perhaps too much traffic is causing the Quicktime files some stress.

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We definitely wouldn’t recommend taking this to heart just yet, but according to DigiTimes, the likes of TomTom (and even Garmin) are “likely to soon launch their own-brand GPS PDA smartphones.” Of course, the news comes smashed in with word that quite a few more notable smartphone manufacturers (such as HTC, i-mate, and HP) are also gearing up to release GPS-enabled handsets in the near future, and while Garmin is no stranger to the mobile GPS realm, this would be (relatively, at least) new territory for ole TomTom. Beyond that, details are scant, but we’ll be sure to keep an ear to the ground.

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

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