I still don’t have an iPhone. I’ve wanted one from the moment it was released, but I think I’m just mistiming my upgrades… I plumped for the iPod touch and it has been ok for me for a while. I will get an iPhone this year (I need a smartphone). But I also want to give the iPad a spin. So what do I want if I’m using both devices?
Read the rest…
When I Get an iPhone and an iPad
06.03.2010Goals for 2010
06.01.2010So it’s a fine new year. I have set myself some ambitious challenges for 2010. Let’s compare notes and help each other out…
Read the rest…
Exciting Stuff
21.11.2009I’m hugely excited by certain trends that are appearing lately. Ultimately it all comes down to how successful the goal of moving everything onto “the cloud” is becoming.
It all started a few years ago when the big software companies realised the potential of the web to take over the desktop. They put into place strategies which are now starting to see some fulfilment.
I’ve hidden the rest of this post away for a change. Go find it
Microsoft started putting a lot of emphasis on developing the .Net framework. Mozilla, Apple and Google worked hard on improving web browsers, developing and fostering earth-shattering web apps. But then came some major changes.
First: Google Chrome OS. I haven’t had chance to get this up and running yet so I’m not too sure how successful it will be. Only time will tell. The biggest concern I have is lack of support for third-party peripherals. I’m sure Google will rectify this soon enough.
Undoubtedly it will start people thinking. Microsoft and Apple have put a lot of effort into improving performance in their respective OSs, but neither has drastically deviated from the beaten path like Google.
Then there’s Go, SPDY, Wave… the list goes on. Google is really driving forward with cloud computing.
Second is HTML5. Some of the brilliant recommendations for this brand new version of everyone’s favourite markup language are going to make the next iteration of web apps even more compelling. And with most modern web browsers conforming to some sort of standards and processing Javascript at a decent speed, we could see widespread adoption of these advances very soon.
So what does all of this mean? Well personally I believe that for many consumers who have no real need for high-spec machines running expensive software, an operating system that is inexpensive, fast, lean, and gets them online very quickly will be a real pull.
For people who need more advanced apps… we’re not going to see the end of Windows, Linux or Mac OS anytime soon. But with some major desktop tools steadily moving to the web, it looks as though a web developer’s job could soon be completely online.
As offline functionality starts to make an appearance in more and more web apps, I believe we’re going to see certain apps including this as a feature in premium subscription levels.
Something else I’m intrigued by at the moment is the advent of single sign-on. Sadly I don’t believe that it will ever catch on everywhere, but it may be enough to make the remaining latecomers ship up or ship out.
What’s really interesting is how some people are using OAuth. It’s meant as an API authentication system, but Elliott Kember and a few others are making the ingenious use of it. Some of his apps and ideas use the Twitter OAuth system to log users in.
So I don’t have to create an account for his latest app, Chatrbox, I simply sign in over on Twitter.
This is an interesting approach and fuels the debate over whether OAuth and OpenID can get along or whether OAuth will simply kick OpenID’s butt.
Whatever happens, it all adds up to a brighter web-based future, don’t you think?
Going Green Is Hard Work
02.10.2009Now I know you disagree… all you have to do is become exposed to gamma radiation and get real angry, right? Wrong. You are not Bruce Banner, and you’ll never turn into the Incredible Hulk. Plus you don’t play with gamma radiation do you? Be honest now…
That’s not the kind of green I’m talking about. It seems for the past couple of years a lot of people have gone crazy about being eco-friendly, saving the planet, greenhouse gases and whatnot.
Here in the UK, the government has set up and continues to fund the Carbon Trust and various green initiatives (which we should have been doing years ago). For most consumers this means changing lightbulbs from incandescent to fluorescent, with obvious benefits all round.
But there’s an even better solution to CFLs: LEDs. That’s right, those little plastic light bulbs you messed about with at school! A lot of research and development has been put into manufacturing LED lamps that match the usefulness of fluorescent bulbs.
There are some amazing benefits:
- They last even longer than fluorescent bulbs (much longer than the old incandescent ones)
- They give off a better quality of light, brighter and whiter
- They come on immediately
- They give off very little heat
- They consume a quarter of the power of fluorescent bulbs
- They don’t buzz
- They don’t contain any mercury
- They are 100% recyclable
Now I don’t care who you are, that’s amazing! These are the ideal. So what’s the catch? Well at the moment they’re ever so slightly more expensive… but once you’ve got them, you’re saving money!
For commercial environments (particular suspended ceiling office spaces) this is a big winner. Couple these babies with some intelligent lighting systems and you might never have to change your bulbs!
Saving money + planet = the thrifty super hero… still not quite the Incredible Hulk though!
This is all from research that I’m doing for a new client. They’re into supplying, fitting and testing these bad boys. More details coming soon!
I Want Google Wave
01.10.2009[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PK2eiItbWUg]
Waste of Time
12.09.2009If you follow the link embedded in the title to this article you will be taken to a BBC report with a video on it about some of the latest trends in modern computing. Have a watch and come back here when you’re done.
3G vs LTE-Advanced
27.04.2009Does it make any sense to you? It didn’t make any sense to me either a few years ago. But this little snippet from Wikipedia makes it all very clear:
LTE provides up to 326.4 Mbit/s for downlink and 86.4 Mbit/s for uplink. LTE-Advanced, in development as a minor update to LTE networks, supports maximum download rates of over 1 Gbit/s.
Basically, I want LTE-Advanced now. Interesting that it’s only a “minor update” to existing LTE networks. Apparently there’s only one of these planned and in production at the moment… in Oslo. I’m moving to Norway, b’bye!
Overcoming Professional Prejudice
21.04.2009I’ve just been on the phone with a potential client. From our brief chat it’s clear that they have experienced problems with “web” people before now. This has affected their view of our services at FlipStorm, even though they know nothing about us.
CMSs != Web Apps? WTF?
23.12.2008![]()
Well it’s coming to the end of 2008 and there’s nothing left to say, but:
Why Are CMSs Not Included In The “Web Apps” Balloon?
Mac OS X and NDAS
11.11.2008I am loving my Mac. I’m no fanboy, mind. I appreciate the simplicity and extra thought that make up its better parts. There are still some things I may find to do in Windows. I will be installing Windows as a matter of cause (and no doubt it will run blindingly fast!)
