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I’m not sure I like the sense of grazing and herding architectures. Although superficially bucolic, it has something horrible and locust-like about it if you think for any period of time.
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Occasional errors will be introduced through replication. For error correction 3d printers will connect to each other and blend their schematics. It’s not quite what I expected as our future but it makes sense.
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I don’t need an apartment. I’ve never needed to play table football as much as I do right now. I wonder if it’s okay to lick it.
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With any luck the same effect will take Clay’s book higher up the Amazon rankings.
Category: Links
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I’m sure Cal was scratching on the front door of the Steam offices (or whatever they use instead – orbital organitropolis probably) for one of these a while back.
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Very exciting – impressed by both sets of people there. Remarkable good taste, by all accounts.
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It looks great, but unfortunately I’ve not had much of a chance to play with it yet as I don’t have an invitation. Sad Tom.
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Design patterns are now established. Probably people need to redesign less. So is it a bold new step, or is it a distraction from where the changes actually should be happening?
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I mean, otherwise, there’s a precedent for surveillance where we just sort of have to take Phorm’s word for the idea that they’re not tracking personal or private stuff. It seems particularly sinister to me.
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Well unfortunately it’s not that awesome, as it only seems to actually broadcast your location when you press a button, presumably as a consequence of being kidnapped or something. Fun though.
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“But wait, you say that my iPod isn’t wrapped up in a pretty little white case? Oh, I guess you haven’t heard of a pretty little white case I like to call my skull.”
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Difficult to really get too worked up about stuff like this, to be honest.
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God, the five dollar bill is a monstrous horror of crap masquerading as a bank note. I don’t know what they think they’re doing. Having said all that, my current favourite is New Zealand’s currency. Gorgeous.
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It looks gorgeous. Here’s an admission for you. The visual style of a fair few of my presentations are based around colour combinations that I’ve lifted from their type sample pages.
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Still, this way I won’t lose it if I need it in a hurry to freak out a n00b.
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Disappointed by the fact that over-half of them are from DC Comics 31st Century super-teams, particularly The Legion of Substitute Heroes, who are intentionally lame. I know too much about this stuff.
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It’s from Milton R Cudney’s “Eliminating Self-Defeating Behaviors” (apparently published in Michigan in 1975 by Life Giving Enterprises). This sense of what is natural and ordered basically fucks us all.
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Absolutely fascinating book of what appear to be map-like visualisations of literary themes, books, sentence lengths and the like. I’m trying desperately to find out where to get my hands on it. Any ideas?
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The last one on the page I think is absolutely beautiful. I wonder if there are any sites where you can find really amazing designs that you can take into a laser engraver to have put on your machine…
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It’s a decent piece that I in most part agree with. I’m a little disappointed (as ever I suppose) by the need to package up complex issues in a couple of minutes. My position is … simplified … let’s say.
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Had a play with one for the first time the other day down the pub and it was undeniable fun. Looking forward to getting my pink one on Tuesday.
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I do get into some trouble for not having much of a sense of humour about gay jokes. This is why.
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When a unique person visits it, a new person joins the community. It’s a lovely association to make. In the end, it’s a game about traffic, only it’s assembled in such an elegant form…
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Really interesting set of things going on here – stores your auth information in a cookie, which is quite classy. No need to register at all. Shows you your five nearest geotagged places in Wikipedia.
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Seems like a lovely piece of work there and in record time. The amount of creative engineering I’m seeing around the place is really cool.
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I watched this on stage at SXSW and was totally thrilled about it. Some of the partners we’ve been talking to have been really cool, and Outside.in are definitely among them.
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The idea here is that when you return to your desk at home or work, your location will be updated. Lovely little app.
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It’s a reasonable point, but it’s worth remembering that this is a developer launch aimed at getting people to build applications against the Fire Eagle APIs. We’ll be showing off some of these very soon.
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It’s a bit weird, but there you go!
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Samantha Tripodi did the visual layer of design for Fire Eagle and she did an extraordinary job. She and I played for ages with different feels and stories until we found this one. It’s gorgeous.
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Our first iPhone location updater! Very exciting! Erica got this up and running in a couple of days (at most) from when she started playing with the API. Very cool.
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If you’re interested in Fire Eagle, I think this is the article I’ve read with the most substance.
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I’m going to give my perspective on the whole thing soon once my brain de-clenches. He got to thank the team before I did, which is a bit frustrating!
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This post really made me happy. It’s such a big deal for us that we work out how to give control back to the people using the service. Seems like we’ve got that at least partly right.
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“Users of the PresenceRouter OS X application to fling your Plazes presence about to Jaiku, Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Wamadu, Frazr, Nabaztag” and now (alpha support) Fire Eagle!
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Stops third party sites asking you to give them your logins. Now they can just get formal permission from you to access contact information instead.
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Browser Plus is pretty interesting. At the moment my understanding of it is pretty slight. I need to dig further into that one.
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It just allows you to update your location from a widget, but it was also put together in just a couple of hours which gives you some sense of how hard Fire Eagle is to develop against.
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Want to update your location with Twitter? Now you can. Jesse did a version of Danger Day for the very first public alpha of Fire Eagle last year. Lovely to see him back with us again!
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My particular favourite line is about the “Twitter for Location” description. I really hate that one too. I don’t think it explains what we made at all well.
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The thing I’m most proud of, I think, is that the quality of the team really shines through in the thing we made. However well it goes as a project, I think it’s a classy thing.
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Really looks pretty fascinating. Moreover, the picture of Jon Pertwee is wonderful. Explore! Explore!
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Nice and short. Ten minutes. I want to do more talks that length, I think. It looks like I came across reasonably well, anyway!
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I really think is worth talking about why we didn’t do a social network. Lots of services manage the social graph and Fire Eagle can be hybridised with all of them. Why would we make the effort?
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As is probably obvious, I’m collating a number of the posts about Fire Eagle that have turned up in the last day or so. I really like Matt’s – it gets some of the weird out-there potential.