July 2005 46 posts

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

01

Orangefuzz

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Firefox Ported to Intel Mac

05

Sven Kils Portfolio 2001-2005Personal World Map

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The Ridiculously Thorough Guide to Making Your Own PizzaThe Road AheadMcDonald’s Staff to Become Bling Fashion IconsNYT: Sarah Vowell on Pat Robertson

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Get Yer Invoice On(line)

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Kansas City Star: Why the Batting Average Statistic Has to GoJared Diamond’s “Guns, Germs and Steel” on PBSNYT: Vietnamese Writer Won’t Be Silenced

12

The Most Phallic Building in the WorldDesign in Flight Closes Up ShopFull Text of 11 Jul White House Press BriefingThe City in Seventy-Seven

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1996 TearsPostSecret“The Motel” a Feature Film by Michael KangForbes.com: Evidence that Apple Is Benefitting from an iPod Halo Effect

14

How to Get Started in DesignWSJ Opinion: Karl Rove, WhistleblowerCage Fighter

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How to Write More Clearly, Think More Clearly, and Learn Complex Material More EasilyWhy Executives Should BlogDashboard Widget for Backpack

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NYT: Corrupted PCs Find New Home in the DumpsterO’Reilly: Digital Photography Tips

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Project HoneypotAppleInsider: Inside Apple’s Intel-based Dev Transition KitShiira 1.1Weekend Weblog WorkAmputator

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Make: How to Make Enhanced Podcast for iTunes 4.9Back to PalmThorn Pricks

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Optimus Keyboard

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NYT: Jim Aparo Dead at 72TypeCon 2005NYT: TypeCon in New York City

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Forty Things That Only Happen in MoviesWP: At Comic-Con, Nerd Mentality Rules the Day

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I, JuryYahoo! WidgetsiPod flea

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New Typeface from Process Type Foundry: Maple

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Sat 30 Jul
2005

New Typeface from Process Type Foundry: Maple

Stars

Beautiful work from Eric Olson.

Mon 25 Jul
2005

I, Jury

9:15 PM
Remarks (3)

So I’m sitting there in New York Superior Court this morning, patiently waiting to serve out my jury duty — yeah, I got a summons for jury duty — and I keep thinking back to the last time I was called up for it. That was about ten years ago, when I lived in Washington, D.C., and I’ve never forgotten how I basically punted on my civic responsibility at the time — giving answers to the judge and lawyers that, while not untruthful, probably ensured my dismissal. To this day, I remain pretty ashamed of my behavior then — I can᾿t even remember the rationale behind my need to skip out on jury duty at the time, but it was certainly an insufficient justification.

Now’s my chance to make it right. I found myself feeling not a little bored and uncomfortable on the cold benches of the court room, also actively hoping I’d get chosen this time. The process of selecting jurors from the pool to question is random, but each time they pulled a name out of the hat, I was basically praying it would be mine. Much to my chagrin, it didn’t happen. That᾿s not to say I’m looking to get assigned to an epic, Jacko-style case, but I wouldn’t mind a week or two of court room action. Getting a trial of any greater length than three days, under recently revised state laws, would also have the added benefit of exempting me from further jury service for six years; that’s what you call a great deal. But more than that, I think I just feel compelled to perform this civic duty now. I’m not the irresponsible kid I was at twenty-three, when I was ostensibly civic-minded but more greatly preoccupied with my personal calendar. Basically, I’m an adult now.

Yahoo! Widgets

Stars

The company has purchased Konfabulator and is giving it away free under this new name.

iPod flea

Stars

Pretty well-made parody of iPod line of products.

Sat 23 Jul
2005

NYT: Jim Aparo Dead at 72

Stars

The comic book artist was little celebrated but his depiction of Batman was a key image of my youth. May he rest in peace.

TypeCon 2005

Stars

I was out of town all week on business, so I’ve practically missed the entire thing.

NYT: TypeCon in New York City

Stars

 

Fri 22 Jul
2005

Optimus Keyboard

Stars

The only keyboard I’ve ever seen that deserves the term “stunning.”

Mon 18 Jul
2005

Make: How to Make Enhanced Podcast for iTunes 4.9

Stars

Instructions for creating audio podcasts accompanied by visual slideshows.

Back to Palm

10:28 AM
Remarks (7)

Treo 650Notwithstanding the fact that I’ve been publicly dismissive of both PDAs and data services over wireless phones, I somehow successfully convinced myself that I need a Treo 650 and ordered one last week from Verizon Wireless. I’ve had it only a handful of days and haven’t yet tapped its full potential, but already I’m pretty happy with it. At the very least, it’s an improvement in speed and responsiveness over my Sony Ericsson T608 which was pretty much a piece of crap. Also, the change in carriers has finally, after some five years or so, brought me back to Verizon — I have no particular affection for the company as a whole, but their customer service is leagues above that of Sprint PCS, and they also really do have the cleanest voice signal of all the wireless carriers operating in the New York area.

Thorn Pricks

Stars

Baseball historian John Thorn’s weblog, featuring some truly excellent writing on the genesis of the sport.

Sun 17 Jul
2005

Project Honeypot

Stars

 

AppleInsider: Inside Apple’s Intel-based Dev Transition Kit

Stars

Notes and photos.

Shiira 1.1

Stars

Latest version of Safari-based Web browser for Mac OS X, with some very unique features.

Weekend Weblog Work

6:56 PM
Remarks (5)

I don’t get to do it very often, but this weekend I sat down and took care of some maintenance on Subtraction.com. The first order of business was to get the majority of the pages on the site to validate as XHTML 1.0 Strict — finally. This modest goal had been made inadvertently difficult by my frequent inclusion of links to New York Times articles. In order to provide stable links to articles that might otherwise be removed from the Times’ public archives over time, I process nearly all of them with Aaron Swartz’s invaluable New York Times Link Generator.

Unfortunately that free service produces validator-hostile URLs; if before today you had run a typical page from the Elsewhere section through the W3C Validator, you’d get about a jillion errors back. So I installed Nat Irons’ excellent Amputator plug-in for Movable Type, which allows me to automatically reformat those NYT links so that they will fly through the validator, and with only a bare minimum of edits to the Movable Type publishing templates. Fantastic.

Amputator

Stars

Movable Type plug-in with a great name re-encodes ampersands into standards-friendly entities.

Sat 16 Jul
2005

NYT: Corrupted PCs Find New Home in the Dumpster

Stars

Windows users are throwing out their PCs rather than try to cure them of spyware and virus troubles.

O’Reilly: Digital Photography Tips

Stars

 

Thu 14 Jul
2005

How to Get Started in Design

10:09 PM
Remarks (15)

At the very beginning of a design project, before any boxes have been drawn or pixels have been pushed, there’s the nerve-wracking ritual known as ‘the kick-off.” For larger engagements, clients may set aside as many as four or five full days to sit down with a design team and impart as much knowledge as possible, and it’s up to the design team to make that time worthwhile. To me, this has always been one of the most difficult — and least documented — parts of the design process, because it demands a confluence of skills that you can’t pick up in front of a computer screen. To run a successful kick-off, you have to ask probing questions and carefully parse the answers that come back, taking into account corporate culture and stakeholder agendas. You have to be an assiduous gatherer of information while also a gentle tutor in best practices. And on top of it all, you have to be able to guide conversations and keep things lively, while transitioning issues logically and productively. I’ve done it about two dozen times in my career, and every time I sit down to plan one, it’s almost like starting over from scratch. Really, what makes kick-offs truly difficult is that each and every one is different.

WSJ Opinion: Karl Rove, Whistleblower

Stars

“Rather than calling for Mr. Rove to be fired, they ought to be grateful to him for telling the truth.” Wow. Amazing. They really wrote that.

Cage Fighter

Stars

Little utility restores decent looking icons to Apple’s Mail application under Mac OS X Tiger.

Wed 13 Jul
2005

1996 Tears

9:02 PM
Remarks (1)

To some extent, you’re forever doomed to listen to whatever music you favored in your formative years. For me, from college up to my late twenties, I spent a lot of time listening to music from the United Kingdom — the dance-rock graftings of Madchester, the so-called “shoegazing” brand of droning indie experimentation, and then the more distinctive, less obscure — and less characteristically independent — brand of traditionalism known as “Britpop.” These days, I can sport all the Arcade Fires and Ying Yang Twins I can muster, but at heart I’m most inclined towards the catchy, knowing and facile hooks of pale British youths from the early to mid-1990s.

PostSecret

Stars

“An ongoing community art project where people mail-in their secrets anonymously on one side of a homemade postcard.”

“The Motel” a Feature Film by Michael Kang

Stars

Directorial debut from a friend of mine. Showing at the 28th Asian American International Film Festival.

Forbes.com: Evidence that Apple Is Benefitting from an iPod Halo Effect

Stars

 

Tue 12 Jul
2005

The Most Phallic Building in the World

Stars

 

Design in Flight Closes Up Shop

Stars

 

Full Text of 11 Jul White House Press Briefing

Stars

Question: “You’re not saying anything. You stood at that podium and said that Karl Rove was not involved. And now we find out that he spoke about Joseph Wilson’s wife. So don’t you owe the American public a fuller explanation. Was he involved or was he not? Because contrary to what you told the American people, he did indeed talk about his wife, didn’t he?” Scott McLellan: “There will be a time to talk about this, but now is not the time to talk about it.” Question: “Do you think people will accept that, what you’re saying today?” McClellan: “Again, I’ve responded to the question.”

The City in Seventy-Seven

11:45 AM

Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bronx Is BurningIf ever there was a perfect summer book for me, it’s Jonathan Mahler’s “Ladies and Gentleman, the Bronx Is Burning,” which I finished last week. It’s a completely absorbing tale of New York in 1977, when the city was besieged by fiscal crisis, arson, serial murders, blackouts and divisive politics, a time when New York seemed literally on the brink of a final, catastrophic end. Through meticulous research and a masterful feat of narrative contrivance, Mahler posits that year’s Yankees ballclub — itself stricken with internal strife between the erratic paranoia of manager Billy Martin and the outsized ego of new addition Reggie Jackson — as a metaphor for the city’s troubles, and uses the team’s progression over the course of the year to tell profound, fascinating stories about baseball and an iteration of New York that, in its very character, is almost unrecognizable from its twenty-first century self. New York, politics and baseball — what’s not to like?

Fri 08 Jul
2005

Get Yer Invoice On(line)

1:56 PM
Remarks (5)

BlinksaleWe need an upstart challenger to bring simplified, elegant interaction design to the consumer financial software market and, in no uncertain terms, to completely upset the dominance of Intuit. That company’s industry-leading software is powerful, useful and ubiquitous, but it’s also clunky, overly-accreted and no fun to use. I have a contemptuous relationship with their business accounting package, QuickBooks, whose menu item for closing an accounting file is labeled — I’m not making this up — “Close Company,” and I have only moderately more affection for its personal accounting package Quicken.

So I’m happy to see the talented folks over at Firewheel Design produce a product like Blinksale, a soon-to-be-released, Web-based invoicing tool for small to medium size businesses. I was lucky enough to get a sneak peek at its extremely well-designed interface, and picked up its basic principles in literally just a few minutes — five minutes from log-in to sending out my first test invoice. All told, it’s a beautiful piece of work.

Wed 06 Jul
2005

The Ridiculously Thorough Guide to Making Your Own Pizza

Stars

 

The Road Ahead

10:34 PM
Remarks (10)

CaminoAs a delayed response to some boosterism over at Jon Hicks’ weblog, I was inspired to download and install the Camino Web browser today. It’s slow and somewhat awkward and it lacks the polish of Apple’s own Safari, to say nothing of the outstanding feature set of the Omni Group’s superb but flawed OmniWeb. Still, the browser remains in development with regular builds of its code, working up to its official 1.0 release, and it would be unfair to characterize it as anything less than a terrific piece of work.

McDonald’s Staff to Become Bling Fashion Icons

Stars

The fast food giant is in talks with several prominent designers about redesigning the company’s uniforms. “So far Tommy Hilfiger, P Diddy and [Russell] Simmons are all in contention.” Kind of perfect when you think about it.

NYT: Sarah Vowell on Pat Robertson

Stars

 

Tue 05 Jul
2005

Sven Kils Portfolio 2001-2005

Stars

Poor usability doesn’t obscure this designer’s knockout work (and presentation thereof). Via ShaunInman.com.

Personal World Map

Stars

What’s possible in terms of time and money.

Fri 01 Jul
2005

Orangefuzz

Stars

Excellent online portfolio from Raphy Fedida. Really beautiful, grid-sensitive work.