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Includes the hilariously draconian text of the Final Cut Pro license: “THIS PRODUCT IS LICENSED HEREIN ONLY FOR THE PERSONAL AND NON-COMMERCIAL USE OF A CONSUMER TO (i) ENCODE VIDEO”.
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WildlifeNearYou’s charming team avatars page, and technical colophon.
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This thing is dangerous for “the ladies” to go near, full as it is with photos of desirable handbags, clogs, scarves and vintage linen.
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“There was a moment on location last year while filming the BBC2 documentary series The Virtual Revolution when I realised we were actually creating two projects. I was uploading a photo I had taken on the shoot to my Flickr site, or dispatching another update to my Twitter followers, when the director of photography asked: “Why?”"
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A beautiful elegy for 22 Jermyn Street, London, by the American cinema critic Roger Ebert. That building, which houses an eccentric hotel, and the block which contains them, are soon to be replaced. Anything that includes the following paragraph, crackling with comforting warmth and nostalgia, gets my vote:
“When I’d moved my luggage in, it was still only 10 and I rang down for the full English breakfast. The Spaniard said he would prepare it himself as soon as possible, “because Bob is indisposed.” He appeared with two fried eggs, a rasher of bacon, orange juice, four slices of toast in an upright warmer, butter, strawberry jam, a pot of brewed tea and orange juice. I sat at my table, regarded my fire, poured my tea, turned on Radio 3 and read my Sunday Telegraph.”
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I’m sure this AppleScript has all sorts of other incredible uses, but the one I needed it for was to remove CSS copy-protection from a VIDEO_TS directory I wanted to burn to DVD. Drop a directory containing a VIDEO_TS directory onto this AppleScript and it will generate a fully burnable .img file for you. AppleScript to the rescue again! Wonderful.
February at paulcarvill.com, the home of Paul Carvill on the web 2010 at paulcarvill.com, the home of Paul Carvill on the web
paulcarvill.com
Hi, I'm Paul Carvill and I'm a web developer. I am Head of Interface Development at LBi, Europe's largest digital agency.
I also like walking, cooking, Bollywood and rock 'n' roll.
Archive for February, 2010
Some links that got lost in the system…
Tuesday, February 9th, 2010Links for Tuesday 9th February
Tuesday, February 9th, 2010-
Jonathan Zittrain writes on FT.com on Apple’s closed system for the iPhone and iPad. “The Apple II was a clean slate, a device built – boldly – with no specific tasks in mind…Thirty years later Apple gave us the iPhone. It was easy to use, elegant and cool – and had lots of applications right out of the box. But the company quietly dropped a fundamental feature, one signalled by the dropping of “Computer” from Apple Computer’s name: the iPhone could not be programmed by outsiders”
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I’m inexplicably excited by this guy’s experiments with audio in the browser, having never really been interested in this area before and considered it pretty much a dead end:
“I’m working with an ever growing group of web and Mozilla developers, along with some talented audiophiles, on a project to expose audio spectrum data to JavaScript from Firefox’s audio and video elements.”
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The inimitable Dave Winer on Apple’s attempts to kill Flash. “Adobe might want to consider, right now, very quickly, giving Flash to the public domain. Disclaim all patents, open source all code, etc etc. That would throw the ball squarely back into Apple’s court and would frame the question right now in its most stark terms.”
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The inimitable Dave Winer on Apple’s attempts to kill Flash. “Adobe might want to consider, right now, very quickly, giving Flash to the public domain. Disclaim all patents, open source all code, etc etc. That would throw the ball squarely back into Apple’s court and would frame the question right now in its most stark terms.”
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I think this is an impressive level of transparency from the Firefox user experience team – a planned weekly update on what the team is up to, starting with priorities for FF3.7.
links for 2010-02-05
Friday, February 5th, 2010-
From Channel 4. To quote The Day Today: "Because fact into doubt won't go".
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This American Life iPhone App!!
links for 2010-02-04
Thursday, February 4th, 2010-
"Unlike other companies, Microsoft never developed a true system for innovation. Some of my former colleagues argue that it actually developed a system to thwart innovation. Despite having one of the largest and best corporate laboratories in the world, and the luxury of not one but three chief technology officers, the company routinely manages to frustrate the efforts of its visionary thinkers."
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An utterly enthralling rant about the economics of the web, written 40,000 feet up in the air.
"Newsflash folks: The Internet does NOT want to be FREE… It wants to GET PAID on Fucking Friday, just like everybody else on the damn planet."
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"The book that Dave Farley and I have been working on for nigh on four years, Continuous Delivery, is finally up as a rough cut on Safari. I’m also very proud to announce that it has recently been accepted into Martin Fowler’s Signature Series. The book covers build and deployment automation, continuous integration, test automation, managing infrastructure and environments, configuration management, version control practices, data migration automation, and even governance. That’s a lot of material, and read like this it seems like a bit of a grab-bag of activities that normally gets second billing when you’re delivering software. However these turn out to be absolutely essential activities if you want to get high quality software into the hands of users as fast as possible, and then keep delivering them valuable new features."
links for 2010-02-03
Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010-
Compare what people listen to in My City vs. Your City, based on data from Last.fm.
links for 2010-02-02
Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010-
"This landmark exhibition gives an inside view of how modern India, Pakistan and Bangladesh have been shaped through the lens of their photographers.
From the days when the first Indian-run photographic studios were established in the 19th century, this exhibition tells the story of photography’s development in the subcontinent with over 400 works that have been brought together for the first time. It encompasses social realism and reportage of key political moments in the 1940s, amateur snaps from the 1960s and street photography from the 1970s. Contemporary photographs reveal the reality of everyday life, while the recent digitalisation of image making accelerates its cross-over with fashion and film."
The appliance of science, or, how rumours of Flash’s death are greatly exagerrated
Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010There was some excellent work by Dr. Aleks Krotoski in Sunday night’s BBC documentary Virtual Revolution, especially the interview with Tim Berners-Lee where he reiterated the importance of freedom of information, and freedom of access. Aleks made the point that the federated structure of the internet resists authority. This documentary went out at prime time and did a fantastic job or explaining the absolutely world-changing importance of the web, without patronizing or over-simplifying the issue. Watching it, even after having worked on the web for the last 13 years, almost brought a tear to my eye. They really should do something very, very special with Tim Berners-Lee. Maybe put him on the fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square?
Also, there was yet another polished product launch by Apple this week with the announcement of the iPad.
These two events caused me to think back to a 2008 talk by Jonathan Zittrain, professor of Internet law at Harvard, to employees of The Guardian, as part of their Future of Journalism series. His talk was based on his book, the then about to be published The Future Of The Internet, And How To Stop It.
He talked at length about how we are in danger of adopting a top-down, tightly controlled model for the web, run overwhelmingly in the interests of large corporations; technology’s inexorable move towards locked-down digital units and tethered appliances; and ‘walled garden’ internet access. The beauty of the iPhone, when it launched, was that for what seemed like the first time we had a real web browser on a real mobile device which freed us from the tyranny of telco executives who wanted to control what we used our high-priced WAP data access plans to look at. We could go anywhere we wanted. It felt truly free. Now it seems, as Dr. Aleks pointed out with a useful proportional representation model of the web, we are increasingly moving to a future Zittrain warns about, one with a narrow marketplace controlled by a handful of powerful providers, where we go to iTunes for our music, Amazon, or perhaps iTunes, for our books, to eBay to sell our old stuff and to Wikipedia, run by a sinister cabal of administrators headed by the despotic Jimmy Wales, for our raw factual information. We can’t even view Flash content on an iPhone or Blu-Ray on a Mac due to Apple’s strict control over what can and can’t be installed on these systems. Whether it’s political or, as Steve Jobs supposedly says, because Flash is so buggy, I’m sure we’ll find out when the dust has settled. For now it appears to be a mobile device manufacturer — with something approaching a monopoly — trying to throw their weight around. The documentary raised some fascinating points about power structures on the web, and it certainly seems that we are only really beginning to understand how any of this will work.
Zittrain, in his book (which is itself licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License) ,says,
“A shift to tethered appliances and locked-down PCs will have a ripple effect on long-standing cyberlaw problems, many of which are tugs-of-war between individuals with a real or perceived injury from online activity and those who wish to operate as freely as possible in cyberspace. The capacity for the types of disruptive innovation discussed in the previous chapter will not be the only casualty. A shift to tethered appliances also entails a sea change in the regulability of the Internet. With tethered appliances, the dangers of excess come not from rogue third-party code, but from the much more predictable interventions by regulators into the devices themselves, and in turn into the ways that people can use the appliances.”
The iPad is certainly a continuation on the theme that was started with the iPod – access to app installation is through the App Store only. Jailbreaking your iPhone is possible but verboten. People are already complaining — it doesn’t multitask! there’s no camera! For all that technology has advanced our personal feeling of freedom us, we feel simultaneously liberated and emasculated as a result. I read another quote by someone but I’ve misplaced the link, who said,
“…in the “applianced” world we are threatened by monopolists and potential dictators,”
for whom we could easily substitute Adobe, Microsoft, Google, Oracle, and Mr Steve Jobs.
Recently, Mark Pilgim, a writer an developer advocate at Google, published a blogpost commiserating the demise of the tinkerer; that breed of person who found out how a computer works by poking around the innards of its operating system, or its hardware. Activity seen very rarely these days. Because now, of course, such activity will at the very least get your warranty voided, and at worst get you arrested.
Pilgrim continues this theme in an interview at a great new (to me) blog, The Setup, which asks techies and nerds of all descriptions to describe the technology they use to get the job done. In describing how he wants to still be using his current desktop computer in 20 years, he says
“Commercial vendors have a vested interest in upgrading you to the latest and greatest; supporting the old stuff is unglamorous and expensive. Commercial open source vendors aren’t really much better than commercial proprietary vendors in this regard, but community-led Linux distributions can afford to have different priorities.”
So, does the black box of user-friendliness and usability necessitate a top down, authoritarian attitude to technology, or can the interests of individuals and the market not happily co-exist? There’s certainly an argument for the former when you look at some of the abysmal user experiences offered by open-source software that’s available — Ubuntu; the GIMP. With their vast number of contributors you would expect quality and consistency to improve. But perhaps in the vastly ambiguous area of usability and design a greater number of contributing authors dilutes the quality of a product or an experience. Maybe a lone, dictatorial voice is the only answer here, as in the case of Apple’s justly famous and evangelised user interface. But at what cost comes the power to control every user’s experience, even against their will?
LATE UPDATE: Two other quotes that caught my eye. As an interesting counterpoint, Dion Almaer, erstwhile Mozilla developer and now Developer Advocate at Palm, mulls over profits-based corporations versus goal-based organisations, and passes over the hyperbole about Flash’s rumoured death to express thanks that the Open Web (i.e. the web)
“…is amazing in that there is NO SINGLE VENDOR. If we are able to keep a decent balance between browsers (and thus the platform as we know it) then we have a balance of powers. Sure, in some ways you can’t move as fast as a dictatorship, but there is a reason we don’t want dictatorships in our government (even if the trains run on time!)”
And a former colleague of mine, Daniel Vydra, makes the succinct point,
“Commenters [on this Guardian article] need to decide if apple is a restrictive dangerous monopoly, or a 5% market share joke. They can’t be both.”
links for 2010-02-01
Monday, February 1st, 2010-
About Adobe: They are lazy, Jobs says. They have all this potential to do interesting things but they just refuse to do it. They don’t do anything with the approaches that Apple is taking, like Carbon. Apple does not support Flash because it is so buggy, he says. Whenever a Mac crashes more often than not it’s because of Flash. No one will be using Flash, he says. The world is moving to HTML5.
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"AppleMasters was a group of selected people from all over the world who used and endorsed the Apple Macintosh computer. According to Apple, AppleMasters were "an international group of educators, artists, designers, writers, producers, architects, inventors, scientists, business leaders, humanitarians, musicians, athletes and others who think different."[1] As part of Apple's "Think Different" advertising campaign, Apple would use the members in various forms of advertising – including company events and commercials. In return, Apple would reimburse the members with free computers and other Apple-logo'd equipment." Hmmm, I had been sure Stephen Fry was one, but perhaps I was wrong. But anyway — Jarvis Cocker?!