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Multi-touch interfaces (re)gaining relevance

Sean Lynch | March 2, 2007

A lot of excitement surrounds multi-touch interfaces, partially because of the iPhone and partially because the technology is starting to get cheap enough to be realistic.

Here’s a collection of related links I’ve stumbled upon lately (and a few from the past)

Jeff Han’s original TED talk
More of Jeff’s work

Speculation that Multi-touch is Apple’s next big move
How to build your own Multi-touch interface

Multi-touch communities:
Multi-touch interfaces and usability
NUI Group

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Motorola does something very right

Sean Lynch | October 31, 2006

Yes, the RAZR has been an iPod scale hit. ROKR less so , though a step in the right direction. And my personal favourite, the SLVR, has been doing well for itself too.

But Motorola has completely outdone itself now with what they’re calling the Motofone, which is what I’ve been asking for all along: just give me a good, solid phone. No Video taking, Britney Spears playing, light show raving, king of none phone for me. I just want something to store my numbers and sound reasonable.

Motorola realized that I’m not crazy, built one, and then made it pretty, and now they want to charge me $50 straight up, not after handing over my first born to the cell phone companies.

Not only am I going to buy one as soon as it is available, but if there ever was a phone to start a co-op wireless network with, this would be it. I wonder if Nortel would want to donate a GSM tower…

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Review: Windows Live Writer Beta

Sean Lynch | September 15, 2006

AKA The only reason I will be installing Crossover Office on any future Intel Macs.  I’m not kidding, it’s that good.  Don’t bother reading this, go get yourself a copy at the Writer Homepage.

Using Windows Live Writer feels like how it must have felt to use that very first version of Microsoft Word.  All that ease of use pouring over you after years of being stuck with edit. How everything is fast and intuitive and not hidden in awkward commands or layers of documentation.  Windows Live Writer is possibly the best example of “Do one thing and do it well.”

I cannot remember being this passionate about a Microsoft product since I used Encarta to breeze through my fourth grade report on Jellyfish.

But let’s start from the beginning. The beginning being my blogs, all three of them.  One is a personal blog on a webserver running on WordPress, the second is a friend’s development blog I contribute to on Blogger (De-coded under links), and the third is CS & the City.  None of my blogs are official Microsoft Live Spaces blogs and all of them were picked up without any hassle by Writer. All I had to provide is the URL, username, and password.

With this information in hand, Writer sets out to my blog, making a connection using one of a number of supported API (According to the website, Writer supports RSD (Really Simple Discoverability), the Metaweblog API, and the Movable Type API.)  Once it has successfully connected to the blog, it writes a quick-test post and then downloads all the applicable styling information and related images so that when you write your post, you can write it in exactly the same style as it will appear in your web browser.  Of course, you can switch to a normal word processor style view, or even HTML view to fine tune the markup.  As Writer works now, however, it creates some of the cleanest markup I’ve seen from a Microsoft product (Frontpage anyone?).

I also love the fact that it picks up my categories I have set up on my WordPress blogs (although it doesn’t appear to let me add additional ones from Writer).  It also lets me change properties of a post – enabling/disabling comments and trackbacks, adding trackbacks to ping, etc.

I do have a few pinch points I need to point out though.

The sidebar has links to a number of recently written posts as well as a link to create a new post.  Unfortunately, clicking them will open up your new or existing post in a brand new window.  Word learned this lesson years ago, and Firefox has more recently taught IE a thing or two.  Tabs for posts would be a welcome addition and I can only assume it’s coming in a future version.

Spell checking is available, but it isn’t in-line like Word or Outlook.  Now that I can get this functionality in the WordPress or Blogger console with Firefox 2.0, I don’t want to give it up.  In the same vein, though Writer will automatically save draft versions of my post, it will not propagate them to my blog automatically. It gives me a button to do that (under the Publish drop down menu).

All in all, an incredibly solid product considering it’s in beta and it’s free.  I’m really looking forward to where the MS developers take it and what third-parties do with the powerful SDK.  I’ve already got myself a Flickr plug-in.

Last complaint?  It’s not available on my Mac, yet.  Come on, there was Windows Media Player for Mac! Why not a Windows Live Writer too? Especially if the developers add support for .Mac blogs.  That would be a kick in Apple’s iPants.

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