Archive for May, 2010

The Day I Fell In Love With The Internet

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

I remember the day I fell in love with the Internet. It was sometime around 1990 or 1991 (okay, so maybe I remember the circumstances of the day but not the exact date), and I was in San Jose, California, hanging out with one of my cousins at the home of one of his friends. We were watching the Cincinnati Reds play the San Francisco Giants on TV, and about 20 minutes after the game my cousin’s friend emerged from his room with the box score from the game that had just ended in his hand. I was amazed – life would never be the same.

As a lifelong sports geek, I have a love for box scores, statistics,  and records. One of the cherished daily rituals of my youth was picking up the morning paper and looking at the box scores from the previous day’s action and using their acronyms and numbers to try and reconstruct what happened in those games. Box scores were magical to the younger me, but they could also be a source of frustration, mostly because I had to wait until the next day to see them and I often missed out on some of them because West Coast games would end after the local papers were printed. This info that I cherished was only available to me via an imperfect system.

So on that fateful day when the friend of my cousin handed me a copy of a box score from a game that had ended just minutes ago, I felt like a stranger in a strange land. How did this happen? He told me that he had printed it via his Prodigy account, and once I understood what that meant, I knew that I needed access to this new (to me) online world. I eventually got online, and was able to take part in the information revolution that ensued, particularly in the world of sports information. I and others of my sports-inclined ilk now have immediate access to every piece of information we could ever want – instant box scores, in-game box scores and gamecasts, archives, real-time fantasy sports – and that’s not even taking into account live online broadcasts of games.

So here I am with access to more info than I ever could have imagined – but something’s missing. I don’t know if it’s just a function of getting older, or if it’s just information overload, but I don’t read box scores anymore, either online or in the newspaper (which I still get on weekends).  The charm is missing – they used to look like this, now they look like this, they used to seem special, now they just blend in with the rest of the information noise.  I wouldn’t want to go back to the pre-Internet days, mind you, but I do sometimes long for those days when the little bit of info that was given to me somehow meant so much more.

Follow Friday

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Still don’t get Twitter?  Well, it’s not really something to “get”, it’s a tool for communication and thus is all about how you use it.  And the best way to get that is to look at how others are using it.

Follow Friday is a tradition of tweeting a list of interesting people you follow on Twitter.  Usually, you just list the Twitter accounts of people you find interesting and leave it up to the reader to decide why.  But, since this is a blog post, I’ll give you some explanation.  Here’s a few tweeps (twerps?) I follow.

http://twitter.com/thecupboulder – The Cup.  This Boulder coffee shop is using Twitter to connect with its customers.  Not just with updates about the shop but with news and opinions  on what’s happening around them in downtown Boulder (also things they are passionate about, namely hockey and the Tour de France).

http://twitter.com/wilw – Wil Wheaton.  Actor (the sensitive kid in Stand By Me, and the character you most wanted to throw out an airlock on Star Trek the Next Generation) turned writer.  Enough of a celebrity to be doing interesting things (like appearing on The Big Bang Theory) but not so much of one that he doesn’t have time to post.  A common complaint about Twitter is “I don’t care what people are having for lunch.”  Wil’s posts are interesting and avoid the mundane.

http://twitter.com/eatcomida – Comida taco truck.  Twitter (or Facebook) is the way to find out where Boulder’s new taco truck is hanging out today.

http://twitter.com/donttrythis – Adam Savage.   One of the two Mythbusters, a special effects artist, and all around nerd.  This is a guy who blows stuff up for a living and tweets about it.

http://twitter.com/glaciericecream – Glacier Homemade
Ice Cream & Gelato.  Free Ice Cream updates – ‘nuf said!

Following anyone interesting?  Post ‘em in the comments!

The Future of Digital Periodicals?

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

So I got me an iPad. In a future post I’ll review it thoroughly, but first (I suspect like many other of the initial one million iPad owners) I need to discover more precisely how it fits into my life, what computational tasks I can effectively offload to it, what uses it’s really capable of and appropriate for. Of the canonical uses Apple has proposed for the iPad – web surfing, media, games, etc – I’ve been pleasantly unsurprised to see that it handles most quite well. I was quite surprised, however, to see altogether missing from the iPad and its ecosystem at launch an inbuilt platform for magazines and other periodicals akin to that provided for books via iBooks. I think it would be a perfect fit for the large-scale digital distribution of periodicals, surely on the horizon in one form or another, particularly for traditional glossy magazines in a way that e-ink based e-readers are not. In all likelihood, Apple was avoiding biting off more than it could chew with a first gen product launch, but I’m happy to see that several publishers have wasted no time in taking a stab at it themselves.

At one point I had about $150 per year in subscriptions – science & tech industry journals + lots of mainstream stuff like Scientific American, Popular Science, Time, Wired, etc. I have precisely one physical (as in dead tree) subscription now – Time…and only that because it was given to me as a gift and I’ve been kept just interested enough to neglect to cancel it. I graduated and got busy, but also I got tired of hauling all of that paper around which I couldn’t search (like the web), which was fundamentally unlinked & static, and which fell out of date if I didn’t read it quickly enough. The state of the publishing industry seems to indicate that I’m not the only one who’s reading fewer magazines these days, but I’ve always liked the format. There are aspects of a magazine in the realms of informational layout, graphic design, and portability which have not to date been replicated (well) on the web or in any other electronic form. Not that publishers haven’t tried, as attested to by a digital publishing landscape littered with past failures (remember the bright future of CD-ROMs?). Over the past few years the tech necessary to at least attempt digital magazines has finally come to pass – primarily portable devices with strong graphics capabilities and wireless networking ubiquity at reasonable speeds from the mobile phone carriers and WiFi zones. E-readers like the Kindle have tried to position themselves for magazines, but couldn’t pull it off like they did with newspapers because e-ink blows for anything other than static black and white content. Smartphones almost got us there, but are ultimately (and necessarily) just too small for the purpose, both in screen real-estate and battery capacity. So it’s not surprising that publishers were keenly interested in what Apple might announce in a tablet form factor…interested enough even to hold their plans in the design phase until they found out. Many have now gone gaga over the iPad, but one in particular has caught my eye.

I had heard before the iPad about digital magazine initiatives from Condé Nast and seen the Sports Illustrated mockup that went viral a few months ago (www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntyXvLnxyXk, developed by Time, Inc in conjunction with an NYC design firm called The Wonder Factory), but the system I’ve found really interesting on my iPad is that which Popular Science (and SciAm, and Wired, among others) have attached themselves to – a more mature effort from the European firm Bonnier R&D and London design consultancy BERG. Theirs is the first vision of digital magazines I’ve seen which seems to have real UI design substance behind it. And they are also first to market, because you can get the April and May issues of Popular Science embedded in their architecture on the iPad right now. I have…and it’s pretty damn cool! :)

See their general concept, Mag+, here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iAZCr6canvw

And here’s a demo of the specific Popular Science+ version which is the first they’ve deployed to the iPad:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gjePuSCy21E

It really does work like they show in the design mockup (minus a few features they haven’t had time to implement yet), which I think is both a testament to the practicality of the design and the capabilities of the iPad. BERG and Popular Science have done something right, because PopSci+ costs $5 per issue in the app store (same as the print edition’s newsstand price), which is surely more than publishers are going to be able to charge for digital magazines once things really get rolling, and yet they’re rumored to have sold 150,000+ copies of the April issue alone thus far.

Perhaps I’ll return to the “curated” experience of reading magazines again in the future once the novelty wears off and digital pricing models become sane, rather than just reading the magazines’ websites. I’m sure the potential market will grow rapidly as more iPads and other tablet form-factor devices are sold. As for the iPad itself, it’s going to have a big impact on mobile computing. It’s been a long time since I’ve had this much fun with a computing device! More on that next post…