Distributed Punch in the Face System

Suggestion for a distributed open-source system to fight badness:

The system allows you to enter the name/location of a person who needs to be punched in the face, somewhere in the world (a known spammer, for example).

Then, you see if there is anyone near you that needs to be punched in the face. Punch them.

I’m not sure if it will scale.

 

The WebOS doesn’t need Windows

There has been lots of talk about a potential Google operating system lately. A web-based operating system is probably more of a convenient way to describe the way Google and the web in general is obsoleting traditional desktop applications and systems than an expression of any tangible product or project.

That said, people love screenshots. Almost all screenshots I’ve seen of mocked-up ideas of what a WebOS might be look a lot like Windows XP. This is understandable as it’s a quick way to say “look, this looks like like your normal computer, but it’s a WEBSITE!”.

Windows (as in little boxes that hold tools, documents, and applications, not as in “Microsoft Windows?”) don’t actually make a lot of sense in web-based applications.

First, desktop operating systems have mature and dedicated “windows managers” that do all of the hard work of actually having those little boxes all over our screens. Sure, a lot of this behaviour can be replicated with fancy web-twenny techniques, but for the most part, it’s not worth it.

Which brings us to the second and more important reason that the WebOS won’t have windows. It doesn’t need Windows. Interface designers have been waiting for the end of the traditional desktop operating system interface (desktop, folders, icons, windows, menus, etc.) since shortly after it was invented. Web applications like Gmail have shown that you can have effective and efficient interfaces without anything like windows that overlap each other.

The browser canvas already lives in a window, often in a tab inside that window. Filling it with another set of windows with a set of behaviour that is similar to, but not exactly like the behaviour of the base operating system windows is likely to create a variety of usability issues.

Rather than a distinct product that looks like Microsoft Windows but lives on the web, I suspect the move to web-based computing will be (and already is) a gradual shift. Web-based mail is a big change that has already happened without the help of any replication of the desktop/windows/icons/menu interface.

Incidentally, MIT One Laptop Per Child interface has done away with the concept of overlapping windows. Each application or document runs full-screen at all times. This is partly informed by the size of the screen on the device, but it also conveniently eliminates an entire mental model required to interact with multiple windows.

All of that said, there was some talk at the recent Firefox Summit about ways to allow Firefox to bring web applications deeper into the desktop. For example, allow a web-application like Gmail to run it’s own process of Firefox that can display status in the system-tray (or dock), respond to system calls (like “open the default email application”), and stay alive even when your web-browser is closed. The idea is that rather than making desktop applications more web-aware (which seems to be the Microsoft Vista approach), we can make web-applications more desktop aware.

 

Acts of Volition Radio: Session 26

Acts of Volition Radio: Session Twenty Six

In keeping with my complete lack of a publishing schedule, here is the latest session of Acts of Volition Radio. If the commentary is lacking, I assure you that the songs are worth the wait.

A few pairs of great songs. Recorded Wednesday, November 22, 2006 by Steven Garrity. Run time: 45min.

Session Twenty Six Playlist:

  1. Joel Plaskett – A Million Dollars
  2. Joel Plaskett – Nowhere With You
  3. The Thermals – Here’s Your Future
  4. The Thermals – I Might Need You To Kill
  5. Sloan – Another Way I Could Do It
  6. Sloan – Live The Life You’re Dreaming Of
  7. Joshua Radin – Winter
  8. Metric – Police And The Private
  9. Steve Earle – Jerusalem

For more, see the previous Acts of Volition Radio sessions or subscribe to the Acts of Volition Radio RSS feed.

Acts of Volition Radio
Acts of Volition Radio
Acts of Volition Radio: Session 26
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Windows Vista: Right on the Button(s)

After experimenting briefly with a beta version, I have determined the best new feature of Windows Vista.

I complained back in 2001 about the rough edges on large form buttons in Internet Explorer. After installing Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP, this was one of the first things I tested. I was dismayed to discover that the problem still persists.

However, on Windows Vista using IE 7, the corners of wide form buttons are not broken. That alone is worth years and millions of dollars worth of development.

Windows XP vs. Vista form buttons screenshot

That said, I still don’t understand what determines how wide the form buttons actually become (seems to be some kind of length_of_button_text × 1.N formula).

 

Tango Theme for Firefox

Garrett LeSage and a group of other good people have completed a nice upgrade of the Tango theme for Firefox 2. The theme brings the icons from the Tango Desktop Project to Firefox along with many improvements in making Firefox look and feel more like a native application on Linux.

Tango theme for Firefox 2 preview

There are also a series of “sub-themes” as well. The Gnome sub-theme matches with the default Gnome icon theme, Tangerine matches with the Ubuntu theme, and Industrial for the old Industrial Gnome theme.

Highly recommended for those using Firefox on Linux. There are rumblings of an update for the Tango theme for Thunderbird 2 as well.