Archive for October 29th, 2007

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The I Hate To Cook BookPeg Bracken was the author of a bestselling cookbook that I really have to find a copy of, The I Hate To Cook Book. She was one of the first to suggest (late 50s, early 60s) that busy housewives use store bought items and other shortcuts in their meal making. She was a former advertising executive who went on to write other books, including I Hate To Housekeep Book, other cookbooks, and the memoir A Window Over The Kitchen Sink.

She died of pulmonary fibrosis in Portland, OR.

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Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) has finally launched its new Leopard operating system late Friday, after a delay of four months. In addition, Apple said it would no longer accepts cash for its popular iPhone and limit sales to two per person, an effort to stop people from reselling them.

NBC, a unit of General Electric (NYSE: GE) and New Corp.’s (NYSE: NWS) Fox are set to launch an advertising-supported online video site, Hulu.com. A test version should go online today. The site will have programming from varied entertainment companies as it tries capture some of the audience Google’s (NASDAQ: GOOG) YouTube has.

Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ) reported third-quarter earnings this morning that fell by 34% from a year ago due to tax charges. Verizon earned $1.27 billion, or 44 cents per share in the quarter. Excluding charges, earnings would have been 63 cents per share, beating analysts’ estimate by a penny.

eBay Inc.’s (NASDAQ: EBAY) Skype and mobile phone group 3 have launched a mobile handset that allows Skype users to make free Internet calls to each other while on the move. The companies said they hoped to sell “several hundred thousand” 3 Skypephone units worldwide in the fourth quarter of this year.

Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F) might be in the spotlight now that the UAW narrowly ratified a new contract with Chrysler LLC over the weekend. The Chrysler contract is similar to the deal reached with General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM) and the union will likely want to reach a similar deal with Ford. Ford, however, is in deeper financial trouble than Chrysler or GM and may want additional concessions from the union.

Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) announced it is buying Global Care Solutions. Financial terms were not disclosed.

 

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Think you’re good at Resistance: Fall of Man? Brush up your skills as Insomniac’s FPS game is featured in a brand new GameStop tournament. Winners of the tournament will get a Star Wars Battlefront PSP, jacket and more. You must be 17 years of age or older to register. Make us proud, PS3 Fanboys.

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Picture-passwords the way forward

I’m sure many of us have forgotten our passwords once or twice before, what more with the number of accounts that we have to remember these days. Scientists have developed a new kind of software that uses pictures in place of letters and numbers for security codes, and hopes to expand this idea into other areas to prevent unauthorized entry by fraudsters. Not only that, this development could make it easier for those who experience language difficulties such as dyslexia. Such picture-passwords are drawn over a background, where the computer will remember the actual number of strokes used, the way the image was started as well as the order in which they were made. While a picture is said to be worth a thousand words, a few characters would suffice here in lieu of traditional passwords.

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It’s the eternal struggle of who will ultimately destroy who: the disc or the microwave? While most of you will undoubtedly say “the microwave, you dolt!” there are still a few people who secretly wish the discs would unleash a Limit Break of sorts, shooting lightning back into the microwave and causing an explosion of awesome proportions. Sadly, Blu-ray is not the medium to bring about the end of this microwave oppression. Our only qualms with this video: shaky cam is lame and we really wish he tossed the disc back into the PS3 to see if the PS3 would explode somehow.

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We do just about everything with our computers — shopping, gossiping, and, occasionally, actual work. Meanwhile, your hard drive is quietly recording all of it, from Social Security numbers to credit card data to those honeymoon photos you didn’t show the in-laws. For the most part, that’s a good thing: It’s that capacity for instant data retrieval that makes the computer so useful. But for an identity thief, it’s a great thing: A whopping third of us leave sensitive information intact when we discard our computers. And even files you’ve deleted can be easily recovered.

Sometimes, those left-over bits can be valuable clues for crime fighters: The field of digital forensics is revolutionizing detective work say experts, just as DNA evidence did last decade. Watch the above video and step into the high-tech labs of a cutting edge digital forensics firm; learn how investigators reconstruct computer data to solve crimes — and to win lawsuits. And most importantly, learn how you can delete files so that they’re deleted for good. Plus: Recent headlines from the Switched newsroom.

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Courtesy kristin kahle

Designer Kristin Kahle has been inspired by her own mother’s brave fight against chronic breast cancer for the past six years, and as a tribute to her mother, 50% of proceeds from her covered patent leather belt will go to the Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation. Kristin’s accessories have graced the figures of Jennifer Aniston, Tyra Banks and Mary J. Blige. Not only is this belt twice as nice for being stylish and charitable, but it’s even reversible. Fit yourself with one today at kristinkahle.com for $165.

A pretty gruesome game for those who wish there were a more Halloween season-appropriate word/spelling/guessing puzzle game. Just when you thought the idea of hanging a stick-man stranger for your own vocabularical shortcomings was gruesome enough. Thanks, armorgames!

(warning: stick person violence and paper-and-ink gore)

Personally, I think the timer is a nice stess-inducing touch. I think I’d fail less often if I wasn’t all paranoid about that darn ticking.

A billboard displaying the ambiguous phrase, Arrester Bed
We can learn a lot about designing usable web sites from the offline world.

For instance, when I was in Adelaide a couple of weeks ago visiting family, I took a drive around the Adelaide Hills. Cruising along the freeway at 120 kms/hr, I passed the sign in the picture on the right. The first thing that popped into my head was “What the heck does that mean?”

I’m not sure what it’s like in your part of the world, but when I was last living in Adelaide, South Australia, the term arrester bed definitely wasn’t common language.

(I was half expecting to see an intimidating king-size mattress in full police uniform and order me to pull over.)

The second thing that popped into my head — and this is possibly an indication that I spend far too much time online — was this:

“Imagine if something similarly obscure was used to describe a tab on a web site. No-one would know what the text linked to!”

Steve Krug wrote about this very situation — that we should think of our users as driving by in a car, and provide them with navigation labels that are quick to digest. However it’s obvious that we shouldn’t use every billboard that we come across as inspiration.

The moral of this story is that, when deciding upon the words to use for your navigation items, it’s really important to use language that your audience knows and understands immediately, without them having to delve deep into the limits of their vocabulary and figure it out. Exactly what that language is depends on your site and your audience — if your site is for teens, then it may be perfectly acceptable to call the link for your Contact Us page “Write Us, Yo”. For most sites, however, you’re better off sticking with the much safer Contact or Contact Us.

PS. I found out later that an arrester bed is in fact an emergency ramp, available for drivers of vehicles (usually trucks) whose brakes have failed. The ramp provides a safer way of coming to a stop than the barrier gate or a tree. It may be an American term; personally, I’d have preferred to see it called “Emergency Safety Ramp”. In the heat of the moment, that’s going to require less brain power on the driver’s behalf, thus potentially saving more lives.

This article provided by sitepoint.com.

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Coincidence or not, Apple has stiffened up the requirements to pick up a new iPhone shortly after announcing that 250,000 or so of the 1.4 million it sold in Q4 went to unlockers. In an admittedly intriguing move, Apple has decided that it will “no longer accept cash for iPhone purchases,” and moreover, each individual will only be allowed to buy two (on plastic, of course) in an effort to “stop people from reselling them.” More specifically, spokeswoman Natalie Kerris stated that the company is “requiring a credit or debit card for payment to discourage unauthorized resellers,” so don’t even bother bringing the greenbacks if you’re lookin’ to grab an iPhone from Apple.

[Image courtesy of PCWorld]

 

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