Archives for category: internet

Yesterday at brunch it was suggested to me that the forward slash in my </3 t-shirt design (recently mentioned in Brooklyn Based and CRAFT Magazine's blog, yaaayy!) could be replaced by the symbol of Lacan's split subject, which is written as split subject symbol.

For those of you who were not self-loathing enough to take many literary theory or psychology classes, the split subject is just Lacan's morose notion that the subject (which generally means humans in the context of how we think and talk and write about ourselves and others as individuals) is always divided and alienated from itself.

napkin doodles of Lacanian broken/validated heart

I guess this would be a heart that's been broken and/or validated by our alienation from ourselves. Or by Lacan, whose writing once drove me to throw the four-pound Norton Anthology of Literary Criticism against walls.

delicious/kenspeckle wordle art

Inspired by Britta's interesting annotation of her top 10 del.icio.us tags, I took a look at mine.

  1. internet (200): Mostly articles or sites about the internet, ranging in quality from silly meta jokes to heady philosophical articles.
  2. culture (170): Culture is pretty tough to define. I'd say these are links about the way people interact: online, through advertising, and in life generally. Occasionally a link that's sort of…uh…"cultured" will slip in there too, such as New York Magazine's NYC Books Canon.
  3. humor (157): I spend a lot of time clicking on funny stuff on the internet, ok people?
  4. technology (146): Lots of web-related links here too, but these also include non-internet tech, like the Phoenix Mars Mission's discovery of ice or—more importantly—sheep sculptures made of telephones.
  5. art (134): Weird art I've seen on the WWWs.
  6. funny (104): This is mostly redundant to my humor tag. When I first started using del.icio.us I didn't like the idea of adjectives as tags, but I've loosened up with the last 104 funny things I bookmarked.
  7. design (98): These links have some crossover with art (in fact 57 of my links share the two tags) but tend to be more about graphic or web design and don't include conceptual art.
  8. history (94): I'm a nerd.
  9. politics (86): Mostly interesting articles about whatever's going on at the time.
  10. news (83): I'm a little surprised that this appears in my top 10, since I don't think of myself as a real news hound.

Of course, most of my dominant tags were pretty clear when I bookmarked del.icio.us/kenspeckle wordle art a few months back. Also interesting is that my top 4 tags cover this blog's supposed topics.

More compelling than my top 10 tags, however, is the top 10 for all of del.icio.us. Oddly enough, my top 10 list doesn't overlap at all with the 10 most popular tags for all users:

  1. design
  2. blog
  3. video
  4. software
  5. tools
  6. music
  7. programming
  8. webdesign
  9. reference
  10. tutorial

The moral of the story being that most people bookmark much more useful stuff than I do.

silverback gorilla

My coworker and about page glamour-shot photographer James told me yesterday that Silverback, which we had oohhhed and ahhhed over a few months ago when it was just a holding page with a very cool (albeit almost unnoticeable) parallax effect, has released some hot new usability testing software for Mac.

I tried it out today at work while testing a microsite I've been plugging away at for awhile and it's absolutely incredible!

Silverback unobtrusively records all actions on the screen and the tester's facial expressions and comments (through iSight) and lets you mark important moments in the video using the Mac remote. After testing is over, it combines the two videos into one file—the screen capture is the main image with an inset video of the user's face—and exports as QuickTime so you can share the results without a plethora of software licenses.

Four absolute best things about Silverback:

  1. It completely hides itself during recording so the user isn't distracted by his own image in the corner of the screen somewhere.
  2. It subtly highlights every click with a little bubble in the final video file.
  3. Fifty. Dollars. That's it.
  4. Gorilla scientist logo, OMG!

The only problem is that you're not "supposed" to do usability testing on a Mac, since it's (still!) not the platform of choice for most people. But I think that if you're sure your site works the same in Firefox or Safari as it does on IE, this is definitely the way to go. At $50 for this much functionality, you pretty much can't go wrong.

Check their demo. This embedding of it starts mid-way through, skipping the overview to show how the recorded session will look when exported:

Embedded video doesn't work in all RSS readers, so you may have to visit the actual post.

By the way, Silverback is the creation of an English web design and consultancy group called Clearleft.

shirt

I finally silkscreened into reality one of the witty (I hope) t-shirt ideas I mentioned awhile back.

These </3 t-shirts are a really geeky double entendre: To IM addicts everywhere this is obviously a broken heart, but for the anal xhtml geeks among us it could also be a validated heart. Or, true, the end of a heart. I like to think it means my heart's written in valid xhtml.

Anyway, this idea came up during deliriously dorky IM conversations with coworkers at my last job. We were thinking that a regular <3 looked like it was going to get caught by W3C's validator and wondered if </3 would *have* to mean a broken heart.

So now I've got a bunch of </3 shirts in four different styles for sale in my new etsy store.

update: Broken heart/valid heart shirts (and mugs and stickers and magnets and mousepads) are now available at zazzle.com/kenspeckle. Hand silkscreened shirts will only be available while supplies last or by special request.

glitter shirt

congratulations!

I'm just back from a trip to Florida, during which I had a chance encounter with one of JetBlue's new BetaBlue planes, equipped with free WiFi access.

I somehow missed the much documented inaugural flight, so I was shocked and psyched to see the BetaBlue pamphlet, but saddened to read that the WiFi provided no actual web surfing, but only email and instant messaging…and only through Yahoo!?!

what can I do on BetaBlue?

According to Engadget, "If all goes well in what is admittedly a beta test, more aircraft will receive the WiFi makeover, and more features [...] will be rolled out, along with additional service providers besides Yahoo."

Well that's a relief! JetBlue, if you're listening, keep in mind that we'd rather have the option of paying to get service-agnostic access than be limited to an account with a contacts list that's about three years outdated, eh?

Of course offering WiFi at all — especially free WiFi — puts JetBlue light years beyond any other airline (and just reinforces their status as my all-time favorite airline), but seriously: We get that you don't want to give unlimited internet access, but don't tell us whose servers will be holding our emails and IMs.

Oh, and btw: What on earth does free Yahoo! email and IMing on your planes have to do with an RSS icon? If we can only log into Yahoo! email and Yahoo! messenger, we pretty much by definition cannot access our ballooning number of unread items in Google Reader. Ya know?

email...IM...RSS???

datamob

Sean Flannagan and I have finally finished initial development and obsessive content compilation for Datamob, a directory that highlights the connection between public datasets and awesome interfaces that people have created to make public data more accessible—including amazing tools like OpenCongress, EveryBlock, and Oakland Crimespotting.

You're intrigued, I can tell. Well, it is, admittedly, a g2g website—that's my this guy's neologism for geek-to-geek, like b2b. We hope it'll be a useful and compelling way for data geeks and developers to find new data sources and inspiration for their projects. And why should the non-geek care? Our mission statement puts it best:

Widely accessible public data enables informed civic engagement, and we believe that providing restriction-free data to developers is the best way to promote the technological innovations that will spread knowledge.

For those of you who do better with visualizations than words, Datamob is a lot like the Google chart API pie chart below: 61% datasets, 28% interfaces, 11% resources, 100% informative, empowering geeky goodness [breakdown as of post time].

datamob pie chart

My language nerds, I haven't forsaken you. Wondering about the etymology of Datamob's name? Well, the folks at Freebase coined the term "data mob" to describe a group of data-lovers working together to perfect a small portion of Freebase's ambitiously all-encompassing database. As for our Datamob, we hope it'll inspire more institutions with vast reserves of information to put their data out there in accessible formats—and bring together more data mobbers to bring that information to life.

And to ensure I've covered all my geek demographics with this post, a few words on the development of Datamob: For the past two months I've had my head entirely buried in enlightening railscasts, the amazing heroku (a web-based rails development platform), and the somewhat befuddling rails framework documentation. Weren't you wondering where I'd been? This was my first-ever Rails project, and it was an amazing learning process.

For all the buzz about RoR making things so easy even an orangutan could build a slick web app, your average geeky front-end web girl who tools around a bit with the PHP in her WordPress template (that would be me) still had a lot to learn about actual programming work. But figuring it all out was totally exhilarating.

For anyone thinking of taking their first venture into the big, bad world of programming, A List Apart just published two super-introductory articles to Ruby on Rails—they don't include code, but have a great general introduction to the concepts you'll need to know. If you're ready to get coding, I quite liked Agile Web Development With Rails, although Rails 2.0 has outdated some of it.

Happy Datamobbing!

So two weeks ago when we were all having a chuckle at Google ad sales people's surprising faith in the future of scannable barcodes for tracking print ads, I wanted to post a few notable barcode arts & craft projects. As I commented on Sean's post, geeky artists and are way more likely to increase the virtually nonexistant adoption of barcode cameraphone scanning in the U.S. than…uh…advertising—and it's still a long shot.

But then I got extremely distracted by the primaries, so I never posted it. Well, now that Super Tuesday is over and our hopemonger (best new word ever) is finally ahead in the delegate count of everyone except The NYT (which seems to be refusing to count even one more delegate until Hillary starts wining), voilà!

QR code needlepoint

qr code needlepoint

This awesome needlepoint QR code by tikaro apparently uses semapedia to point to the wikipedia article on pillows [via craft].

QR code cake

qr code cake

Flickr user Magitisa must have an incredible amount of patience, because she stenciled a QR code onto a cake [also via craft].

every barcode

every barcode screensho

In case you forgot what barcodes used to look like, there's the non-cameraphone-compatible Every Barcode animation by the barcode-obsessed Scott Blake of Barcode Art. He's got plenty of other barcode goodness, but Every Barcode is definitely the best—how can you beat a flash animation that cycles through all 10,000,000,000,000 possible barcodes (if you let it run for ten years, that is)?

space invaders scarf

space invaders scarf

This extremely geeky scarf, made by a strange collaboration between British knitwear designers Office Lendorff and "mobile enthusiasts" (although it's not really clear what they do when not encouraging knitwear enthusiasts to knit QR codes onto scarves) Kaywa features a secret QR code knitted below a pixelated Space Invaders pattern. According to one purchaser, the code reads "insert coin for new life."

eRuv: A Street History in Semacode

eruv poster

And, of course you all remember the previously kenspeckle eRuv project, in which Elliott Malkin bravely plastered the Lower East Side with semacode posters that pointed to old photographs of the former Third Avenue El.