POST ARCHIVE
- Stupid is as stupid does, and the LVRJ sucks
So in a Saturday, March 6 followup to the first article, the Las Vegas Review-Journal now reports that the Informatics school is the most expensive program at UNLV. Right. Does anyone actually know what Informatics is or question the accuracy of that claim (note that they didn’t say where they got it from)?
I seem to recall a president who went to war after misrepresenting that someone was hiding WMDs and incited a big country to invade a smaller one halfway across the globe, needlessly killing several thousand soldiers and just generally being a retarded jerk.
Okay so maybe this isn’t a war but killing education based on misinformation and misrepresentation is bad enough. LVRJ forgot to take into account that INF is the fastest growing degree at UNLV (over 200% the current school term), that it is the program that covers little things like cybersecurity (preventing hackerman Chang from getting into DoD computers) and HCI (making sure your iPhone has all those touchy-feely gizmos) and realize that LVRJ is suggesting that we should cut one of the few departments that teach for jobs that are still in demand. Nice. All because of not checking facts.
The University readily publishes current, accurate data. The Provost’s 2009 Joint Evaluation Taskforce (JET) report on the Engineering program for example, reports “…this program is highly multidisciplinary and has a very high enrollment of women and other underrepresented groups. The program only has 2 tenure-track faculty.” Furthermore, “[W]hile approved by the Board of Regents as an independent school, the program has no support staff and pays for an administrative assistant through course buyouts.”
Write to LVRJ and demand a retraction, correction and proof! People/colleagues, we are about to die a quick and painful death here and we need to fight. In 2010, informatics is a critical program both for the university as well as Las Vegas and the last thing we need is someone with erroneous information deciding our future!
Below is the comment I submitted to LVRJ (though who knows if it will actually get posted) – I ask and urge and plead for anyone who gives a crap that the paper seems to have it out for programs who make a difference to fight back…
LVRJ misreported that Informatics is the most expensive program – that was the case when it first started but is currently inline with other engineering programs.
It was also highly misrepresented and mischaracterized. The 2009 provost report actually recommends HIRING more staff because it is a fast growing field and covers a wide range of cognate areas, in addition to the extremely high ratio of sponsored research contracts and the awards it has received. The program is still small because it is brand new (started in 2005).
It was reported as “most expensive” because the report was based on 2006’s FTE (full-time enrollment) divided by the cost of faculty. Informatics has a low FTE because a high percentage of the students, especially at the graduate level, are non-traditional students who work full-time jobs like myself and cannot attend school full-time. There are only four tenured staff and the enrollment in the program increased 200% in the last year.
On top of the, the earlier LVRJ article that listed the top 20 most expensive programs had an interesting common thread – they were all engineering and computer based programs – and the ones whose fields still have jobs in demand!
To see more accurate reporting, go to the UNLV Provost Joint Evaluation Team (JET) web page and see the 2009 reports. Shame on LVRJ for the bad reporting.
And don’t get me started on why the state is cutting education funding in the first place. Sure the University can use streamlining, but are we setting up the state to lose what edge it has?
Incidentally, for those of you who don’t know:
The mission of the School of Informatics is to provide an academic path for students who are interested in pursuing a career that combines computing and information technology with another academic discipline. The curriculum is inherently interdisciplinary, and recognizes that the human, information, and technology dimensions of problem solving are equal contributors in advanced informatics applications areas. The School of Informatics will produce graduates that become successful and internationally competitive educators, entrepreneurs, innovators, and leaders in the global information economy.
- Hahaha
- More Grumbling on Tumblr
Just trying things on for size but getting into Tumblr and digging it. It’s all the posts from here plus several more including short commentaries and reblogs. See it at http://matsays.tumblr.com.
- State of Nevada decides stupid is a good thing
completely understand when recession hits and states start to look for ways to reduce deficits, it never ceases to amaze me that education is almost inevitably one of the first to be cut. In Nevada, where we are already near the bottom in elementary and secondary education, the University system (UNLV and UNR) have nonetheless continued, despite double digit cuts last year, managed to survive and prosper. But now the State, under the wily direction of Gov. Gibbons (blah) has dictated another $9 million in cuts at UNLV. Amongst the proposed options is to cut the most expensive departments, but if you look at the list of the 20 most expensive departments – they’re the very ones that are in demand right now. Cutting those departments would be tantamount to saying, we can be human but we don’t really need the opposable thumbs.
Read the rest of my op-ed here…
- The main thing is not to install Flash!
[via DownloadSquad by Jay Hathaway]
With the Pwn2Own hacking contest coming up at Vancouver’s CanSecWest security conference later this month, Italian computer security blog OneITSecurity took some time to interview Charlie Miller. Miller, in case you’re not familiar, is a security expert who has won Pwn2Own two years running by hacking Apple’s Safari browser with incredible speed. Safari isn’t the only target — this year, all major browsers and a selection of mobile operating systems will serve as Pwn2Own challenges – but it’s fair to say that Miller knows a thing or two about keeping your browser secure.
Here are the highlights from Miller’s interview:
He thinks Windows 7 will prove more secure than OS X Snow Leopard this year, in part because it doesn’t have Java and Flash enabled by default. Windows’ full ASLR (address space layout randomization) also gives it a security advantage.
When asked what he thought would make the safest OS and browser combo, he opted for Chrome or IE8 on Windows 7, with no Flash installed, although “there probably isn’t enough difference between the browsers to get worked up about.”
For my money, the juiciest quote from the interview was “The main thing is not to install Flash!”
On the mobile side, Miller guessed that the iPhone 3GS would be more easily exploitable than the Motorola Droid, mainly because the iPhone’s been around longer, and has been subjected to more extensive security research.
You can check out Miller’s full answers (in English or Italian!) at OneITSecurity.
- dcurtis Manifesto
Well said. Original here.
Take everything you know about the internet. Now fucking forget it.
The internet is an infant. It’s a pile of crap. I’m tempted to call it defective. The W3C is worse than the UN. We need to make progress. We need to push forward. And in order to do that, we need to experiment and search out possibilities for expanding our horizons. We need to step out of the boxes we’ve sealed around us. There’s a world outside the crazy “best practices” created to overcome horrific shortcomings of CSS. We are not confined to the way things are.
When you start to build something new, think about the what could be, the what may be, and the what will be. Don’t settle, don’t give up, don’t get stuck in a box built by other people’s misguided interaction paradigms. The internet is open and free, and that means there are no rules.
- Powered by Google
Yesterday, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) granted Google Energy’s request to purchase and resell wholesale energy. Google Energy was formed in December for this purpose. Google claims that the group was formed to regulate its own energy costs, but with the grant specifically allowing the reselling of purchased bulk energy, it opens the doors for Google to compete in a wholly new market selling to consumers even.
So now Google is in the data storage, ISP, mobile device, hardware, software, and now the energy market. For all the resources that Google provides that I use and inasmuch as I like how much they make my life easier, this may have been one step too far. Any thoughts?
- Lifepix #004
I told Jen I would make fresh potstickers for dinner on the weekend but she asked me to make this instead. Ever try to roll that rice paper stuff? Maybe we’ll have to do some Archi’s take out.
Can’t take credit – shot courtesy of FoodPornDaily (rockin’ site I must say)…
- The Power of Oranges
Marketing and social media firm Imperial Leisure has an advertisement featuring 2380 slices of Jaffa oranges to power an iPhone, to promote the sale of Jaffa oranges. Per TUAWM, “Talk about thinking outside of the box, or in this case, the crate.” And I suppose you wouldn’t get a cold for at least a year after that.
But I thought you weren’t supposed to mix apples and oranges.
- Buzz and other social intrusions
Set aside the fact that there’s already a lawsuit against Google Buzz, but at what point does social networking become just too much? Not being an avid user of Facebook or Twitter, sometimes I give off a pretty negative impression of both and others but I am trying (for Jen’s sake). I don’t use Gmail so I haven’t gotten into the whole Buzz thang – not that I would have anyway. So after much deliberation and thought I came to the conclusion that it’s just me. What my deal is is that I avoid the “friendsy” social networking but I do in fact utilize others – like LinkedIn. I would gather that it’s because it is less socially oriented and more professionally oriented.
To that end, however, I do wonder how I will deal with this little ditty about Outlook taking in social networks. With iStreamPlanet Boss Mio being such a fan of all things Redmond, of course we use Exchange and Outlook so there’s pretty much no doubt that as soon as Outlook 2010 drops, we’ll have it all at our fingertips.

On the one hand that could be great – not having to log into all the networks each time. But I can also see a real danger in it, both from a productivity as well as a privacy standpoint. In the article, Terrence O’Brien writes “The question is whether or not developers will be able to make the marriage seamless and unobtrusive. Let’s just hope we won’t have to train our spam filters to start blocking Facebook updates.” Touché. Guess I’ll have to download the Outlook Social Connect beta and find out for myself. Speaking of LinkedIn – if anyone knows of a GIS job opening in Honolulu, Denver or Des Moines, shoot me an email (no joke).
- A Win for WordPress
I think (after four years), that WordPress may have finally won Jen over. While there are many nice things about Blogger, the total UX of the authoring side is just tedious at best, and the tools for image modification never seem to work right. Albeit that there is a direct shot between the Blogger platform and Picasa vis-a-vis Google, which definitely speeds up the uploading process, but double the time to lay it out and for image intensive blogs like MadeByGirl, it’s just wasteful and frustrating. Plus it throws inordinate amounts of unnecessary code (not that WP doesn’t as well, but it’s pretty trimmed down – last night I manually corrected Jen’s post and cut out 20 nested <div>s with identical styling plus another 18 that were there for no apparent reason).
So I set up a WP instance for her to play around with and it looks like she’s digging it. She’s worried that she’s going to lose some of the benefits of using the Google-based platform but I think that with the stats she has (trust me, she’s way beyond what MatSays will ever do) she doesn’t really need to worry.
The one downer note – the import function works great but it puts Blogger tags as WP categories so you might have to massage the DB by hand a bit. Wonder if they are aware of that little bug.
- World of the Weird: Bananas Fix DVDs
Crazy and I don’t even want to know how “they” figured this out but I thought it was funny, crazy, interesting and useful enough to bother reposting…from Unplggd’s Home Hacks:
Scratches on discs happen. After one of our favorite DVDs started to skip after receiving a few too many scratches we started to look for a solution to salvage it. Sure there are DVD scratch removal devices that you can buy, but why waste money when there is a solution to be found right in our own homes? Using toothpaste, a banana, a rag and window cleaner we will show you how to remove scratches from a DVD and with any luck the unplayable will become playable.

What You Need
Equipment:
toothpaste
clean rag
banana
window cleanerInstructions
1. The first thing you do is apply toothpaste on the scratched surface of the DVD. Next, rub the toothpaste gently into the DVD using the rag. Let this sit for about a minute.
2. Remove the toothpaste from the DVD using the rag. Then take the cut banana and in small circular motions rub the banana into the DVD. After you have applied the banana to the DVD, you will then take the peel and use this to rub the DVD in small circular motions.
3. Clean the DVD using the rag. Make sure to remove all the traces of the banana and peel. Spray window cleaner onto the surface of the DVD and continue cleaning the DVD. If you are lucky, your formerly unplayable DVD has now been salvaged!
Additional Notes: We experimented with using just toothpaste and just the banana, but we received the best results from using the toothpaste first and following it with the banana.
- After a hellish day, the world is all right
Despite the sprinkles and symbolic logic, sometimes The Strip can be surprisingly beautiful. Shot from north side of SEB at dusk.

- The Box
I was reading a blog post last night that was dishing advice for (web) designers on how to find solutions and inspiration when approaching new sites…nothing earth shattering really, all except one. But first, a digression. I work for an unusual company. It’s unusual in that the real value behind our work is the ability to solve somewhat complex problems under severe time constraints with fairly elegant solutions both visually as well as with respect to network and MIS limitations, all with restrictive resources in terms of manpower and horsepower.
So the real juice behind our success in 9 years is our ability to think outside the box. Honestly I can’t stand that expression but the reason I am not hunting for another metaphor is because everyone understands it. So what am I getting at? Back to the post I was reading.
The gem from the post was “know what the box is.” It sounds simple enough and certainly something we almost take as a given. But do you really?
- A logician I will never be
Four weeks into INF760 and it is very apparent that I may be in over my head. Here’s proof (no pun intended) that logic isn’t my strong suit. Ever take a class where you knew from day 1 that you might just fail but were compelled to take it out of the pure challenge of it?

- When does a device go too far? A cat is not a tiger…
In the fallout advent days since the overhype release of the iDon’tKnowWhatIAmNow, even Google is still chasing after that market with nightly builds of the Chromium UI which appear, for all intensive purposes, poised to take on the Fruit Tablet. But this, frankly, is just getting out of hand.

I’ll give it to the Quince company – they make nice interfaces. Really nice interfaces. Smooth, sleek and all that. But when it comes to devices, it’s sometimes a hit or miss. Google, on the other hand, well…they’re still playing a lot of catch-up. Google is a great big brother data collection/aggregation company but for all the work put into Android, especially into v2, it’s still just not the same. Jennifer, a long time Mac-head, battled with me for the better part of 11 years. If you walk into our home/MadeByGirl offices now, however, it’s nothing but one-bite fruit machines all over the place. And though I hate some things (ok, code-writing is just an abomination and I STILL can’t get used to the command keys, something about Ctrl and Alt just fit my fingers well). And I suspect that the next few objets d’art that materialize will also be sleek and ringing “ta-da” when turned on.
Take the Kindle. Now that’s a device with purpose. Why is it so popular? Because it has one purpose and one purpose only. And it does it well. Hey, if they added on a couple of other features, awesome, but it’s when it becomes overbuilt, that’s when it starts to become pointless. Just like that, the iPod. One purpose from inception, super design, awesome and intuitive interface, good UX, sells millions billions.My G1, on the other hand, I am quickly learning that I wish it were just a freakin’ phone. My very first Sprint mobile (circa 1993) was a somewhat bricky Samsung with a rocker switch and I loved it. Hell, I wish I still had it – the roller switch was just so easy to use (compared to this pinhead sized trackball thing). And for all the touchscreen love, I still miss that the phone was just to make calls. Yes, I post from my phone, send text and all that other crap, but at some point I just started deleting apps because there really was no point to it. Which is my point.
The iPad brings in a new level of “I really don’t know what I want to be.” On the one hand, it’s very limited, but at the same time it’s pretty extreme. I, like a lot of people, don’t seem to know where it will fit in. Maybe I just need to use one for a while. Or not use it as it sits idly on my coffee table, eventually becoming a very expensive coaster with a nice user interface. Jobs had a lot of failures in the past but maybe we just don’t understand the impetus crazy, drunken idea motivation business model behind it quite yet (like Lisa). Maybe the idea behind “just leave them all over like computerized notepads” really does have something behind it.So back to Google – are we just plunking that idea on a browser? As if every time Jennifer tells me to put the freakin laptop away while she’s trying to watch “Millionaire Matchmaker” and share a moment isn’t bad enough, but to have Google in my pocket, on the laptop screen, on my neighborhood gas pump (ok, that hasn’t materialized in my neck of the woods yet), and now on my coffee table too? Right next to an iPad? Does this mean that in 5 years, all the books in my custom-made bookshelf will be replaced with digital tablets (that I have to label with a Brother p-Touch – now there’s a device with purpose – one job, one UI, no complications)?
The age of computerization is nice. It is. But put the shit screen thing down and pick up a book. A real book with paper and ink. Enjoy it…it’s the original UI.
- In My Rush Time Got Rushed
Mondays are always hectic for me. I drag my weekend-abused body into the office around 7am, and after a generally difficult start of the week, I head out at 3:30 to my 4pm Advanced Theory of Informatics class at UNLV. The class is 75 minutes of massive note-taking (say 12-13 pages on average with just a few too many proofs for my comfort level). At 5:15pm I dash out the door for a 30 minute battle with traffic to make it down to Art Institute in Green Valley (always 15 minutes late, but I’m sure my students don’t mind) for a 5:30 Dynamic Design class that runs until 10pm, after which I run home and slam through the daily end-of-day MadeByGirl routines to make it to bed so Jen can get up for class early on Tuesdays.
This past week, I was listening (as always) to a (fantastic) KNPR program by Sean Carroll on the Mysteries of Time. In it, he was describing two schools of thought on the age old question of why it is that as we get older, time seems to pass quicker. The short of it was this:
One group of researchers says that the speed at which our brain impulses fire and travel slows down as we get older and consequently our impression of time actually slows down. They’ve done several studies, but in a non-empirical study by NPR, several older (over 70 years old) and younger (around 20 years old) were asked to close their eyes and guess when a minute had passed. Interestingly, the younger group was generally spot on – with guesses ranging between 55 and 65 seconds. But the older group was much the opposite – instead their guesses averaged about 90 seconds. Big difference. So researchers say that in the same vein that the brain slows time down, more things happen within that timespan (imaging cars passing and honking each time – since your impression of a minute is longer, you would count more cars passing by within your minute).
The second group says that your brain is like a hard drive…it only has so much capacity for thought. When we’re younger, we tend to fill up that space with details of every first impression – our first birthday, our first date, etc – and that as we get older we get more efficient at filtering, which is short for not bothering to remember (on a side note, guys, remember this – that’s why you can’t remember what your wife said 10 minutes ago but you can remember the first date). Basically our brains cycle memories – we hit a birthday and your brain tells itself “oh, I remember this from before so I don’t need to bother wasting space again,” and so as we are less able to remember details from a short time ago, our impression is that things have sped up.
So of course my thought is – it actually must be a little of both. I certainly know that I can’t remember what Jennifer told me (much to her chagrin) 10 minutes ago, but I can remember stupid Jeopardy trivia that I learned in fifth grade reading the Guiness Book of World Records (which I picked up at the dentists office on Monday and was sadly dismayed – not the same book I grew up with – when did it become so picture book dumbed-down). I tested myself a couple of times to guess the minute but I was pretty close – 63 seconds the first time and 61 the second, so maybe it’s less that one.
But to that I add a third theory – totally not based on science, totally my own humble opinion – but maybe time speeds up because we are afraid. A little secret about me – I actually have only one phobia – getting old. My whole life, I was generally not afraid of very much – I love to fly (planes put me to sleep), heights don’t bother me (will cliff dive on command), and bugs, snakes, creepy critters and the like have no effect on me. But getting old – that’s a whole other story.
So my thought is that I’d bet many people are like me but don’t admit it, at least not openly. And maybe the time that seems to be speeding up is kind of like being in a movie where a couple of police officers are racing the clock to diffuse a bomb and the situation gets more and more frantic (except in the movies, they always make it). The “theory” is that as we get older, we realize we have less and less time, and in our frantic haste to accomplish more (let’s face it – I realize it would be a little pointless to try and finish my PhD when I am 60 so I am rushing to do it now) we get more and more frazzled, we take in less and less of life, and it just seems to hurtle forward faster and faster, like a missile catapulting to doom.
The point is that any one of these is just pretty much sad. I guess the slowing neuron activity is one thing but the idea of being able to remember less not because I don’t have the capacity but because my brain is tricking me into not bothering, or feeling that I have less and less time in my life is pretty distressing. So to that I offer the saving grace…it’s old school and it’s hokey but it’s the truth. Enjoy your life – enjoy every minute of every day and make it count. Remember the things that your loved ones tell you, that you do with your family, the things that make you proud of being alive, and how happy waking up to a sunny day makes you. Be thankful, be appreciative, be sharp and mindful of how you contribute to the world and how your life affects others. Know that at the end of the day you made someone else’s life, not just your own, better. And when you start reaching that speeding bullet point in life, just breathe a little and say – at least I got it all in.
- WordPress for Android … Finally
Not that wpToGo wasn’t good but I’m relieved that WordPress for Android has finally surfaced. The interface is obviously similar but for the utilitarian aspect of now being able to change pages as well as posts and approve comments while not at the desk (which I am really trying to do less and less of) is awesome. Nice going!
- Bacon
Life needs a little levity. Matthew Inman – you rock (or at least your warped sense of humor does).
- Google Guys rock
I never bothered to repost after the first one but now that they have the sequel…
The original
The sequel
- That’s Ctrl+C/Ctrl+V, Idiot
[from NYMag by Chris Rozvar, excerpts from Gawker.com]
Great SOTU speech by the Man last night IMHO. It was clear, detailed, lucid, and the GOP response was, well, pretty lackluster and inexplicit. But whatever. Exactly what O-man said about dropping the partisan issue and changing the way of political thinking…it’ll never happen. Lobbyists will still continue to bust the hopes of the rest of middle America (amazing, aren’t they American’s too? Don’t they leave their cushy jobs at night and go back home the same as the rest of us, just with better pay?).
But I digress, here’s the report…
It’s a nightmare that anyone with a Twitter account is vaguely afraid of, but no one before the year 2005 would have ever dreamed of having to worry about: Major Garrett, Fox News’ White House correspondent, accidentally tweeted the wrong link to his 13,059 followers. He intended to send out a shortened link to a transcript of last night’s State of the Union address. Instead, the link that went out was one to a Las Vegas call-girl website. Gawker managed to nab the series of tweets before he took them down:“To overcome the numbing weight of our politics” and other Obama SOTU excerpts http://bit.ly/d6W Wed 27 Jan 18:22
Horrified, he deleted and explained:
I apologize. Bit.ly turned my original link to SOTU excerpts to a soft-porn link. NOT my intention. http://bit.ly/d6WZBu Wed 27 Jan 19:21
The link just posted works. Any frequent visitor here knows that is not my style. Sorry. Shld have caught it sooner. Wed 27 Jan 19:23
Enraged, he admonished and ordered:
For those suckling snide syrup. I publicly acknowledged an innocent mistake and corrected it. If that’s not good enuf, take a hike. Wed 27 Jan 20:18
As Gawker observes, it’s extremely unlikely that bit.ly would make that kind of error. But why would Washington-based Garrett be looking up a Vegas-based website like that?

If Garrett joins the press corps on Obama’s trip to Vegas later in February, we guess we’ll have an answer.
Maybe he should re-tweet it – might as well ride the wave, eh!
- My Tablet

Battery never dies, dependable, can’t compute as fast but really great tactility. And at least a couple hundos less than whatever Apple comes up with.
Update February 3 – thanks, Mark
and…
- Lifepix #004

Waiting for Jen at UNLV Starbucks after class
- The Dark Side of HTML 5 Video
[repost from Sitepoint, author Louis Simoneau]
Last week, YouTube announced beta HTML 5 video support: once you’ve activated the beta, you’ll see videos using a native browser element rather than the Flash plugin. The new player only works with a recent version of either Safari or Chrome (or Chrome Frame in IE), as the video is encoded with the H.264 codec, which isn’t supported in Firefox. A day after YouTube’s announcement, Vimeo made a similar one. They also now provide preliminary support for the HTML video element with a new HTML player.
Superficially this seems like a victory for the “open” Web, right? A few major sites, representing a significant percentage of online video, begin to move away from a proprietary technology (Flash) and towards an open standard (HTML 5). But when you look a little deeper it turns out to not be so simple. Both YouTube and Vimeo have chosen to provide their HTML video encoded with the H.264 codec, which is patent-encumbered. Apple has a big stake in H.264, so Safari supports it, and Google has paid a licensing fee to include an H.264 decoder in Chrome.
Mozilla Firefox, on the other hand, doesn’t support H.264: it will only play HTML video encoded with the Ogg Theora codec. This is partly for ideological reasons, as the Theora codec is open source and therefore inline with Mozilla’s principles. But there’s more to it than just ideology. In reply to YouTube’s announcement, Mozilla’s VP of Engineering, Mike Shaver, published a blog post explaining why Mozilla is sticking to its guns with Theora. He points to H.264’s licensing fees not only as a justification for Mozilla’s decision not to support the format, but also as a more dire threat: “[...] if H.264 becomes an accepted part of the standardized web, those fees are a barrier to entry for developers of new browsers, those bringing the web to new devices or platforms, and those who would build tools to help content and application development.” Mozilla’s Open Source Evangelist, Christopher Blizzard, also had a lot to say on the topic, likening the situation to what happened years ago with the GIF format (and, to a lesser extent, with MP3).
It’s important to remember that the current level of browser support for web standards comes, in large part, from Firefox’s ability to compete on a level playing field with other browsers, and from the Mozilla team’s dedication to open standards. When big sites like YouTube begin positioning a proprietary format as the de facto standard for HTML video, they significantly impede the ability of free-as-in-speech browsers like Firefox to rival their competitors in functionality, which hurts interoperability and innovation on the Web as a whole. Meanwhile, though Chrome and Safari may be excellent browsers, and while their support for modern standards-based HTML and CSS should be applauded, in this respect their choice of a proprietary video format is more reminiscent of IE, circa the mid-90’s.
The fact that YouTube and Vimeo are trumpeting their new HTML 5 video support as an open standards victory is misleading to say the least. And it does lead to confusion: as pointed out by Christopher Blizzard, more than a few people on Twitter seem to think that Firefox’s lack of support for YouTube’s HTML 5 video should be taken to mean that Firefox doesn’t support HTML 5!
YouTube stated that it was launching the new feature in response to a user survey in which “Support HTML5 open web video with open formats” was the most requested feature. It seems that YouTube might only have been paying attention to the first half of the sentence: HTML 5 video, yes; open formats, eh, not so much.
So what do you think? Is it the job of YouTube and other sites like it to lead the way in providing video in an open format? Or should Chrome and Safari lead the way by supporting those formats first? Or are Mozilla being hopeless idealists?
- Lifepix #003

Archi’s Bistro…spring rolls. Not the best I’ve ever had but still pretty decent.
- Will my “123456″ password be safe?
Everyone in INF400 must read these articles:
Imperva Releases Detailed Analysis of 32 Million Breached Consumer Passwords (please download the PDF report for discussion later in the semester)
GottaBeSecure: Mobile Password Security
- Maybe not the same old tune
I’ve had an on-again/off-again thing with online radio – I like Pandora and all but I still can’t get used to having a browser window open – I guess it’s just some inane need for something visual to go with it. Apparently this site – thesixtyone – has been around long enough that they just released a new interface (and apparently there’s a lot of disgruntled viewers who like the old one, but screw them) and I think it’s pretty slick.
From a visual perspective, it fills that little void by replacing the static window blahs in my second monitor with a fullscreen slideshow, complete with bios, photos, and a whole lot of social gaming tricks that I have to say are very well thought out and very easy to use. It does all this while the music plays continuously and the photos keep sliding in
And it’s not Flash (no love lost there). And of course you can buy the music (the true Long Tail in action here). Awesome. On a side note, as CC and I were commenting, we had a good laugh about a miserably failed project we did in 2003 with the then-Death Row Records that had a similar premise but way before social media was the buzz, before Ajax and jQuery frameworks existed, but was nonetheless pretty hot conceptually (though definitely not as good looking).
Anyway, for all my IMD414 students – this is the kind of thing you should be striving for and exactly what we’ll be talking about this quarter. Nice timing.
- Lifepix #002

Dragging my ass to work…another day, another dollar.
- Photoshop in Life
I think this photo is just so freakin’ cool – for those of us who have a love/hate relationship with it, sometimes I wish my work was like this instead (at least until I’m 100 layers deep and masking in 2 seconds as opposed to having to cut a piece of paper).
- Lifepix #001

Eastern off Sunset
- CSS Transitions
[partially reposted from WebDesignerDepot]
Despite people’s expectation of change and movement on the screen, CSS and HTML have few controls that allow you to design interactivity, and those that exist are binary.
A link is either one color or another. A text field is either one size or another. A photo is either transparent or opaque. No in-betweens from one state to the next. No transitions.
This has led to most web pages feeling abrupt, with elements shifting and changing ungracefully.
Yes, we can use DHTML and leverage the jQuery library for transitions, but this requires a lot of code for something that should be very simple.
What we need is a quick and easy way to add simple transitions to the page and in this article you’ll find useful information about CSS transitions and how to use them.
[MatSays: some rambling by the author omitted]
CSS transitions are being introduced right now in CSS Level 3 but have already been added as an extension to Webkit. Right now that means they work only in browsers based on Webkit, including Apple Safari and Google Chrome. [MatSays: so use a "real" browser but don't forget your graceful degradation for MSIE and stuff]

Where CSS Transitions Come From
Transitions have been a part of Webkit for a while and are the basis of a lot of the cool things that the Safari UI can do that other browsers cannot.
But the W3C CSS Workgroup resisted adding transitions to its official specs, some members arguing that transitions are not style properties and would be better handled by a scripting language.
But many designers and developers, myself included, argued that these are in fact styles— only dynamic styles, rather than the traditional static styles that so many of us are used to.
Fortunately, the argument for dynamic styles held the day. Last March, representatives from Apple and Mozilla began adding the CSS Transitions Module to the CSS Level 3 specification, closely modeled on what Apple had already added to Webkit.
[read the complete tutorial here]
- Save MySQL from the Dark Side
[thanks Mark R for passing this on...verbatim from the source site]
If Oracle buys MySQL as part of Sun, database customers will pay the bill.
In April 2009, Oracle announced that it had agreed to acquire Sun. Since Sun had acquired MySQL the previous year, this would mean that Oracle, the market leader for closed source databases, would get to own MySQL, the most popular open source database.
If Oracle acquired MySQL on that basis, it would have as much control over MySQL as money can possibly buy over an open source project. In fact, for most open source projects (such as Linux or Apache) there isn’t any comparable way for a competitor to buy even one tenth as much influence. But MySQL’s success has always depended on the company behind it that develops, sells and promotes it. That company (initially MySQL AB, then Sun) has always owned the important intellectual property rights (IPRs), most notably the trademark, copyright and (so far only for defensive purposes) patents. It has used the IPRs to produce income and has reinvested a large part of those revenues in development, getting not only bigger but also better with time.

If those IPRs fall into the hands of MySQL’s primary competitor, then MySQL immediately ceases to be an alternative to Oracle’s own high-priced products. So far, customers had the choice to use MySQL in new projects instead of Oracle’s products. Some large companies even migrated (switched) from Oracle to MySQL for existing software solutions. And every one could credibly threaten Oracle’s salespeople with using MySQL unless a major discount was granted. If Oracle owns MySQL, it will only laugh when customers try this. Getting rid of this problem is easily worth one billion dollars a year to Oracle, if not more.
- Monkeys and Facebook
[courtesy of Amar Toor on Switched]

If elephants are the Jackson Pollocks of the Animal Kingdom, then orangutans may be the new Ansel Adams of the jungle… or the drunk, trigger-happy sorority girl.
Nonja, an orangutan at the Vienna Zoo, now has her own Facebook page dedicated to the photos she takes herself with a digital camera. Armed with a Samsung ST 1000, all the 33-year-old Nonja has to do is click and whatever her eye sees is automatically uploaded to her Facebook page. Even though she’s nearing senior zoo citizenship, her fan base continues to grow by the day; she’s already hit the 20,000 fan milestone, and the page only launched on Tuesday.
[courtesy of me]
Like this is something new? I have at least 15 orangutans in one of my classes posting to FB on a regular basis already!
J/K - have a nice holiday break all!
PS – For INF400 students – the course textbook is posted on the (forthcoming) class page already so in case you want to get it over the break (that means ask mom and dad for an academic present this year).
- I <3 Dropbox
If you use it, you know. Granted it really isn’t any different than Mesh or any of the other cloud storage systems but Dropbox, at least IMHO, is definitely a step above. Not only is the web version intuitive, but the apps make it just that much easier. In the past whenever Jennifer and I needed to transfer files to each other, we’d email. That eventually graduated to central FTP, then to network but now that we work in separate offices and have to send relatively large files back and forth with changes, Dropbox makes it a cinch. We started using Dropbox about 8 months ago and now I can’t live without it – 7 computers all hooked to the same account, easy access to pretty much everything we need.The jury is still out on why I would need an iPhone app (though I guess it would make it simple for presentations maybe?) but I’m sure I’ll eventually fall into that one (of course, I still have to be convinced to get an iPhone in the first place).
Anyway, I admit that my only issue is that the box could be a bit larger (2GB on the free version) but face it, it’s still a business and it still has employees to pay so they can’t give away the farm. And it probably keeps me from storage too much digital crap that I don’t need.
PS: double bonus if you need a quick web page
- Spark it up!
Last year it was DreamSpark, now it’s WebsiteSpark!
For my students and UNLV colleagues: if you had never heard of the DreamSpark program, you should jump on it. A program launched in 2008 by MSFT (don’t groan) can get you free software. Yes, free. Yes, I’ve gotten some of it. In a blatant (and conducive) attempt to move budding developers and IT staffers to the Redmond dark side, they’re offering Visual Studio (2005 & 2008), Windows Server 2008, Expression Studio and more for free. So while the university’s alliance program is broken and paltry, you could have just headed straight to the source and gotten legit, keyed copies.

Now the new stuff: just released by MSFT – WebsiteSpark. Like it’s older brother, the new program is aimed at small companies – no more than 10 employees – and offers:
- 3 Visual Studio licenses
- 1 Expression Studio 2 or 3 license
- 2 Expression Web licenses
- 3 users license for WinServer 2008 and SQLServer 2008
- 4 processor license for self-hosting WinServer 2008 and SQLServer 2008
That’s a buttload of very expensive stuff for nothing. The caveat is that you must launch a new web app (that’s app boys and girls, not a paltry PHP site) and if you hit it big, you have to exit the program and pay a $100 fee. That’s peanuts compared to the value. Or you could go to a bunch of MSFT seminars and collect copies but that takes a lot of time and snoozing through 4 hours of demos.
- CyanogenMod Ceasing?
Filed under the “That Really Blows” folder … news leaking that my favorite OS modder CyanogenMod has received a cease-and-desist letter from Google. For those of you unfamiliar, the GPhone and other Android phones can be rooted with a mod. In the spirit of trying out new things and hoping to not break my phone at the same time, I tried it out and lo-and-behold it rocks. Why? Well to start, there was an Exchange client with sync right out of the box (those of you with Androids know that it’s $25 a pop for a mail client that supports Exchange). Add to that the fact that you have root, a simplified Office app, and a slew of animation and tactile enhancements, a killer keyboard, and more and you got a really kick ass mod. And I always thought that Google actually supported guys like Cy but apparently I was wrong…
[via Android and Me]

Everyone’s favorite Android hacker appears to have angered someone at Google. We just received word that Cyanogen has received a cease and desist letter from Google. Details are scarce, but it appears Google is not happy about Cyanogen distributing their closed source Android apps (Market, Talk, Gmail, YouTube, etc). CyanogenMod is easily the most popular custom Android rom with over 30,000 active users.
Relevant bits from the chat log we received:
[20:03] google just cease and desisted me
[20:15] cyanogenmod is probably going to be dead
[20:16] i’m opening a dialogue with them
[20:20] no they are talking specifically about the closed-source google apps
[20:20] and how i am not licensed to distribute them
[20:20] my argument is that i only develop for google-experience devices which are already licensed for these apps
[20:20] so we’ll see what they say
[20:20] maybe we can work something out
[20:24] maps, market, talk, gmail, youtubeHopefully, the two parties will be able to work something out. I’ve been using CyanogenMod on both my Android phones for several months and they are awesome. If you want to show your support for Cyanogen, you can always visit his site and place a donation for all the countless hours he has put into improving the Android platform.
- Candy Coated Sweetness
If anyone is in a real gift giving mood – and Jen, that excludes you; thanks for the flat screen :p – this is always a nice option…
* Seamless curved screen, which eliminates bezel and screen gap issues for increased productivity and decreased frustration (according to Center for Human-Computer Interaction – Shupp et al, presented at Graphics Interface 2006)
* 2880 x 900 double WXGA native resolution
* 200 cd/m² brightness
* 0.02ms Rapid Response
* 10,000:1 contrast ratio
* Wide color gamut with 100% coverage of sRGB and 99.3% coverage of Adobe RGB
* Single link DVI-D and HDMI 1.3 input connectors
* USB 2.0 connectivity for easy use of peripherals
* Front panel controls
* On Screen Display (OSD®) and software-based GUI, which enables advanced display control options
- Wordpress under attack, upgrade your blog now
[by Jay Hathaway at DownloadSquad via Mashable]
Several sites are reporting that a major attack on Wordpress blogs started yesterday. The latest version of Wordpress, 2.8.4, is not vulnerable to this particular worm, so upgrading now could save you a lot of headaches. The worm creates a new, hidden administrator account on your blog, allowing whoever’s behind this thing to access the guts of your blog, databases and all.
How do you know if your site has been affected? Lorelle on Wordpress offers two possible ways to find out:
There are strange additions to the pretty permalinks, such as
example.com/category/post-title/%&(%7B$%7Beval(base64_decode($_SERVER%5BHTTP_REFERER%5D))%7D%7D|.+)&%/.
The keywords are “eval” and “base64_decode.”The second clue is that a “back door” was created by a “hidden” Administrator. Check your site users for “Administrator (2)” or a name you do not recognize.
Wordpress has acknowledged the attacks and encouraged users to upgrade their sites. Wordpress.com users aren’t affected, as the whole system has already been updated to 2.8.4. If you’ve already been afflicted by the attack, start on the steps in Wordpress’ FAQ.
I’ve already done the upgrade and it is the same, painless upgrade as usual. Just be sure (especially if you’re using FireFTP) that you set the transfer options to Automatic Mode (Tools > Options > Downloads/Uploads : top fieldset).
- a.k.a. it was too good to last
The New York Times is reporting that “officials” at Wikipedia say that “within weeks, the English-language Wikipedia will begin imposing a layer of editorial review on articles about living people.” Under the nomiker (known as a feature to the the spin doctors) “flagged revisions”, it requires that an experienced editor (to be sure, all editors are volunteers) sign off (a.k.a. approve”) the change before it gets posted live.
If you’ve ever read David Weinberger’s ”Everything is Miscellaneous” (ISBN10: 0805080430) as well as a host of other books and articles on Wikipedia, it’s almost as if Wikimedia is doing a 180 on its own founding principles. Since the beginning, the founders strongly defended and imposed the concept that the community itself was the police and at no time should an editor be the final say…this to extent that a founder removed himself as an editor for changing an article without the consent of the community (consent being reached by culminating responses and critique any time an article change was made or requested).“We are no longer at the point that it is acceptable to throw things at the wall and see what sticks,” said Michael Snow, a lawyer in Seattle who is the chairman of the Wikimedia board. “There was a time probably when the community was more forgiving of things that were inaccurate or fudged in some fashion — whether simply misunderstood or an author had some ax to grind. There is less tolerance for that sort of problem now.”
Not that I am necessarily opposed to having these types of sanctions, but at the same time, it gets to the core of defeating the point of the community based system. The community, as I’ve often maintained, can rarely govern itself over a long period of time. If it could, governments wouldn’t exist. But by the same token, where does the power and authority end? Should the Wikimedia board not consider that instead of a single editor, at the very least, possibly three or more editors should have to consent to the alteration first?
Advocates of the system point out that [it] provides an extra layer of insurance to prevent false posts and improve the overall accuracy. But once again, at whose expense? Is historical information not fact riddled by the opinion of the observer? Who is to determine what is accurate? While editors are, for sure, carefully chosen, aren’t VH1 game show contestants screened as well (ok, bad analogy but you get the idea – substitute radical terrorists in place of game show contestants and it’s a bit more frightening). There is much at stake in this issue – freedom of speech, importance of historical record, observation and opinion – more than just the fact that Wikipedia could potentially end up more like Encyclopedia Brittanica (a system it sought to avoid) than the incarnation we’ve all grown to love over the last eight years.
- Sunday Night Football and Silverlight
[I am re-posting this article by Steve Donohue from Contentinople half because I, tooting my own (or rather my company's own) horn, and half because I wanted to point out the response I made to the idiot who tried to slap down Silverlight and Microsoft as a whole.]
How NBC, NFL Will Stream Sunday Night Football
Web surfers will be able to watch only a fraction of NFL games in live streaming video this season, but those few games that the league will run online will offer several interactive features, including the ability to watch any play in slow motion.
The NFL and NBC Universal said today that they’ll offer live streaming video of NBC’s 17-game Sunday Night Football schedule on NBCSports.com and NFL.com.

After using Adobe Systems Inc. (Nasdaq: ADBE)’s Flash player to deliver games online last year, NBC is switching to Microsoft Corp. (Nasdaq: MSFT)’s Silverlight platform for its football coverage. (more…)
- Rooting for GPhone
Jennifer and I have been going back and forth ever since we went in opposite directions with her coddling her beloved fruitPhone and me wanting to be all nerdy with gPhone. Well, in light of the rumor that TMob will not be making anything but small patch updates (vehemently denied as usual but inevitably always true) on the original G (no Donuts? Dammit, I was hoping for a nice Bavarian Cream or at least something glazed. Forget about Eclair!) I almost made the plunge to iP this week (bad enough that I am already working on Mac at home and office now most of the time).
Fortunately the gods have prevailed and though I’d been goodie-goodie (meaning resistant to) about rooting my G, I finally decided to after some prompting (and a well made video showing how easy it was to do). And damn, it works, and yea, it was easy and quick. Nice work!
Sources:
- Five Great Reasons to Root Your Android Phone on Lifehacker
- Get Root Access in Android with One Click on Lifehacker
- Android Rooting in 1-Click from RyeBrye
- Future of Micropayments
Last night I was responding to Answers on LinkedIn and came across a question in e-Commerce that asked What’s your view of the outlook for micropayment solutions in digital media?
For those who don’t know, a micropayment solution describes a system whereby the product being bought is a significantly small amount (something like $2 or less, so basically iTunes music would be one), and is usually coupled by either a pre-pay or a carting/aggregation system. Some day-to-day examples that have succeeded outside of iTunes would be something like pre-paid transit passes in NYC which remove one fee for each use. In the UK, there’s sQuid which is a similar service but can be used for many types of transactions. In Japan, the phones are tied directly to bank accounts for vending machine purchases.
Having worked on a number of e-Commerce back-ends for varying clients, this has always been an issue that perplexed me. On the one hand, consumers all know that at some point, to access content or acquire goods, that a payment needs to be made. On the flip side, content is so easily accessed for free on the Web (whether legally or quasi-legally) that consumers have started to become used to getting it for free. So how do we impose payment systems that allow for micro-purchasing? The example scenario is for, say, news. Several news providers have already started charging for access to news (which in reality is no different than buying a newspaper) and several others are moving in that direction, but is the subscription model working? Or perhaps will we see a pay-per-content-item system emerge? (more…)
- I <3 Google Voice for G1
Thanks to Meast (iStream’s Managed Webcasting chief), about 18 months ago I got a Grand Central account. Since then it’s been sitting stagnant except for the once bi-monthly login to avoid the account closure. Three months ago, I installed the GC app for G1 and still didn’t really see the point.
But this past week I installed the Google Voice app (and another one just to try out) from the Google team and wow, what a difference. Just the fact that I now have my VMs both audio (without having to call my TMob VM account) and transcripted to text is a true testament of how far things have come (imagine what a God-send the text transcript is sitting in a meeting with your tone off and not wanting to be an ass by dialing out while someone else was speaking). Both apps are easy to use, both have their benefits and drawbacks but as first release software, I suspect they will only get better. Now I see what all the kerfluffle was about when Apple banned Google Voice from the App Store.
- Is Apple More Evil Than Microsoft?
Thanks to Terrence O’Brien for this accurate musing which mirrors my own contemplation why MSFT is labeled the devil’s pitchfork while The Fruit Company continues to garner so much praise. Not that I think EITHER is better than the other – they both have benefits, they both have drawbacks. Anyway, just read it…
[from Switched]
We’re not exactly huge Microsoft boosters around here. Most of us in the Switched offices are devoted Mac users, and there’s at least one professed Linux nerd in house. We regularly joke that it takes just as long in 2009 to open Microsoft Word as it did back in 1992. Operating system preferences aside, we can’t help but feel as though Microsoft is getting a raw deal. The Redmond-based company is regularly painted as the enemy of… well, just about everything. Yet, while the European Union is forcing Microsoft to unbundle Internet Explorer from Windows, no one seems to be keeping an eye on 1 Infinite Loop, Cupertino, CA. Here are a few ways we think Apple is evil, and getting away with it.
Apple is less open than Microsoft
Microsoft is derided for its closed, proprietary software (often rightly so), but people seem quite alright with the idea that you have to buy a Mac (which outside of the pretty box is no different than a Dell) in order to use the OS X operating system. Its tightly integrated apps, like Safari, Mail, iTunes, QuickTime, iCal, and Time Machine, don’t seem to ruffle nearly as many feathers as their Microsoft counterparts. For instance, Microsoft being forced to dump Internet Explorer (IE) isn’t the first time the European Union (EU) has clipped the company’s wings — in 2003 the conglomerate of governments forced Microsoft to release a version of XP without Windows Media Player.If that isn’t evidence enough, consider that it wasn’t until this April that Apple finally started offering DRM-free music through iTunes that could be played on non-iPod devices (something Microsoft had already offered for over a year through its Zune Marketplace). It’s not just software, either — Apple’s MacBook Pros and MacBook Air have batteries that can’t be replaced by the user. So forget carrying a spare battery as backup.
When it comes to openness, the iPhone is even worse. Apple lords over the mobile environment with an iron fist and seems to be making up the rules as it goes along. Take, for example, last week’s rejection of Google Voice. After giving the thumbs down to Google’s application, the company rifled through the App Store and unceremoniously booted several previously approved third-party Google Voice options. Of course, many point the finger at AT&T for this crime against consumer choice, but Apple — the company that was previously able to bend the RIAA to its will — caved like a flan in the cupboard to the maligned carrier’s demands. It isn’t even opening up to the developers (largely responsible for the popularity of the iPhone) by offering an explanation as to why the programs they’ve spent time and effort on are being denied the chance to be sold in the App Store.
Apple copies other companies, just like Microsoft
Everyone likes to complain that Microsoft doesn’t innovate; it just copies the successes of others. But Apple is just as guilty of stealing what works from competitors. Take a look at Dashboard, which puts widgets on your Mac desktop. Dashboard copied not just the functionality, but much of the look of Konfabulator, a widget program that debuted for the Mac in 2003, two years before Dashboard debuted. Or take Spaces, which brings virtual desktops to OS X: it’s a feature that has been available on most Linux distributions since the early ’90s and was included on Amiga systems way back in 1985.Apple doesn’t stop at copying features, however. Mac OS X is Unix, a freely available operating system first released back in 1969, wrapped in a pretty package, and Safari is heavily based on Konqueror, a Web browser for Linux. There is nothing wrong with incorporating open source elements like these in your products, but developers on these projects have been very vocal in complaining about Apple’s failure to contribute its fair share to the open source community.
Apple is a bunch of jerks
What about the jailbreak crowd? According to a recent complaint filed with the U.S. Copyright Office, jailbeaking is a danger to national security. Apple claims that jailbroken phones could shield terrorists and crash cell phone towers, spurious claims at best and at worst reckless fear mongering.Then there is the cult-like air of secrecy, and a Scientology-like penchant for destroying all those who might penetrate. Apple sued Nicholas Ciarelli, publisher of popular Mac blog ThinkSecret, and successfully shut down the Apple rumor site, known for breaking stories such as the release of Leopard, iWork, and the MacMini.
Oh, and let’s not forget about Apple’s attempt to force everyone who installed iTunes to download Safari. Apple tried to sneak the browser onto your system the same way other shady apps try to slip in Yahoo! Toolbar and the like.
Apple only cares about the money
These childish complaints, however, affect only those of us who can afford to drop $299 on a 32-gigabyte iPhone or $1,799 on a MacBook Pro. Though not for entirely noble reasons, Microsoft at least attempts to engage the third world and developing nations by offering Windows at steep discounts and participating in programs like One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) and Intel’s Classmate PC project. The projects may be flawed but Apple offers no similar discounts and is involved in no comparable programs for getting computers into the hands of the world’s poorest. Apple is perfectly happy to have its products manufactured by migrant laborers in Shangai, but targets all sales in China at its small upper and middle classes.Is Apple more evil than Microsoft?
It’s hard to say if Apple is definitively more evil than Microsoft, but what we can tell you is that it’s just as guilty of many of the same bad business practices. Despite sizable gains in market share in the PC world and a group of utterly dominating portable media players, Apple has managed to maintain its perception as an underdog, allowing it to get away with things that Microsoft wouldn’t.Then there is the “cool” factor. Windows and Office have become synonymous with stuffy corporate environments and cubicles, while Apple has forged an identity as the favorite of creative types and hipsters — often the very types of people who staff the editorial departments of the publications that turn a blind eye to Apple’s crimes.
We’ve previously discussed how the media gives Apple a free pass — but the more important question is, what is it up to while everyone is distracted by railing against Microsoft?
- Daddy Cyberpunk
Owe it to William Gibson…25 years old today.

- The UX of CMS
Part of the reason I love WordPress as much as I do is simply that the total user experience of using the admin tools just makes it that much better than most CMS packages. While I still think there are a lot of areas that can use improvement, I have rarely ever used a CMS that made it quite as easy to manage and publish content.
While is why I am extremely proud of the evolution of the CMS that I designed and built for the Wimbledon Live player (see this post).

- Bradbury and the Internet
Hard to believe but apparently science-fiction writer Ray Bradbury, known for some of his pretty far out predictions of the future, doesn’t think much of the Web. More specifically, he says “It’s meaningless; it’s not real. It’s in the air somewhere” in speaking of our dependence on the Internet. He laments that the Web contributes to depersonalizing relationships. I must be an old codger like the 90-year old author (whose “Fahrenheit 451″ is one of my favorite fictional books of all time)…despite working multiple careers that push to advance technology (on the Internet), I still actually dislike it for exactly that reason. In the same week that Shaq finds out that he’s been traded to Cleveland because of a tweet, I’d say that our ability to get useless information and maintain superficial friendships based on SMS has surpassed our own abilities to want to create nurturing relationships with people around us. More here…
- Wimbledon Live – Smooth Stream & Silverlight
Most of you know that I’ve been inundated for the last 2 weeks with a crash course project that was launched on Monday. iStreamPlanet built the player and back-end and is managing video assets for NBC Sports’ presentation of the 2009 Wimbledon Championships. The player is built on Silverlight 2.0 and features a fairly large archive of previews, highlights, and interviews from daily matches as well as full match replay on-demand for selected games.
Starting June 27, it will also feature live feeds including up to five simultaneous live feeds (of course the UK being 8 hours ahead of me means some extremely early morning admin). The live feeds (and subsequent VOD archives) will feature at least one Smooth Stream, Microsoft’s new adaptive streaming technology that will bring you hi-definition video at 2950k (it looks really sweet).
The 2009 Wimbledon runs through July 5th.
- Wordpress 2.8
I kid you not, I am looking forward to the release of 2.8 than the new iPhone. Pretty nerdy, eh? Just a few more hours…
- My day…
This just about summarizes it. Not that there wasn’t a lot to do, just nothing very exciting. Yes, sometimes web design can just be dull.

SocialStuff
Quick Lists
- Art Institute of Las Vegas
- IMD123: Program Logic »
- IMD213: Intermediate Scripting (SP09) »
- IMD223: Advanced Scripting (SU08) »
- IMD322: Dynamic Design (WI09) »
- IMD325: User Centered Design (WI09) »
- IMD335: Usability Testing (SP09) »
- IMD335: Usability Testing (SP08) »
- IMD345: UCD Integration (SU08) »
- IMD375: Databases (FA09) »
- IMD402: Server-Side Technology (WI09) »
- Independent Studies (SU08) »
- University of Nevada, Las Vegas
- INF400: Web Security »
- INF340: Web Design Concepts »
- IMD213: Intermediate Scripting
- IMD322: Dynamic Design
- IMD335: Usability Testing
Yummy Delicious
Meanwhile on Flickr ... [Design//Diseño Pool]
Reading Recommendations
- Art & Science of CSS by Jonathan Snook, Steve Smith, Jina Bolton, Cameron Adams & David Johnson
- Everything You Know About CSS is Wrong! by Rachel Andrew and Kevin Yank
- The Long Tail (updated version) by Jason Baeird
- Beautiful Web Design by Chris Anderson
- The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It
by Jonathan Zittrain - The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri
- The Overcoat and Other Short Stories
by Nikolai Gogol - We The Living by Ayn Rand
- Everything is Miscellaneous by David Weinberger
- Danny The Champion of the World by Roald Dahl
- Successful Freelancing by Miles Burke
- PHP for the World Wide Web by Larry Ullman
- Advanced PHP for the World Wide Web
by Larry Ullman
Soapbox
Mar 8, 2010 16:52 - 0 Comments
Stupid is as stupid does, and the LVRJ sucks
More In Soapbox
- State of Nevada decides stupid is a good thing
- The main thing is not to install Flash!
- dcurtis Manifesto
- Powered by Google
- Buzz and other social intrusions
- A Win for WordPress
- The Box
- That’s Ctrl+C/Ctrl+V, Idiot
IMD414 Dynamic Design
Feb 18, 2010 7:59 - 0 Comments
A Win for WordPress
More In IMD414 Dynamic Design
- The Box
- When does a device go too far? A cat is not a tiger…
- The Dark Side of HTML 5 Video
- Maybe not the same old tune
- CSS Transitions
- Sunday Night Football and Silverlight
- The UX of CMS
- Help Elements Advice
INF400 Web Security
Mar 2, 2010 9:19 - 0 Comments
The main thing is not to install Flash!
More In INF400 Web Security
- Will my “123456″ password be safe?
- Monkeys and Facebook
- Wordpress under attack, upgrade your blog now
- Tweeting and the art of self-invaded privacy


























