-
Entertaining.
-
On The Job is an unobtrusive, easy to use time tracker. It’s not bloated with features you’ll never use, yet it’s powerful enough to handle all of your time tracking needs. On The Job is perfect for anyone billing by the hour.
-
“What does rich mean to a UI (user interface) designer who wants to craft intelligent, compelling, and memorable interactions?”
-
“My old superviser once said to me … that ANT was basically about being as granular in ethnographic work as possible and not taking anything as a given.”
-
An online I Ching. Matt linked to this from his talk notes.(tags: philosophy iching)
-
…as compiled by Donald E Brown.
-
Erk. I’m on video. Hopefully, not being too much of an asshat.
-
NNW hits 3.0. Time to upgrade.
-
MT4 is now in beta. Proper beta. “New look”: looks very good; functionality seems up-to-scratch; to be open-sourced later in the year. Wow.
-
List of corporations, and their “official” typeface (usually for their logotype, but also for other things).
-
Tør Nørretranders’ weblog. He was fabulous at Reboot this year.
-
Code review software from VMWare, powered by Django, works with Subversion and Perforce.
-
Expectnation has launched properly; some of the back-end infoviz for event organisers is really nicely built.
-
I get the feeling last.fm will be just fine; what CBS have _really_ acquired is AudioScrobbler. That data’s worth a fortune.
-
Some good tips from Geoffrey Grosenbach
-
“‘Facebook hasn’t told people they are now being exposed to third party applications,’ Roschke said. ‘They have made the general announcement, but there was no notice to me as to whether I wanted these settings.”
-
Dave Winer++ : “As a system designer, I’d like to believe that Twitter or something like it will always be there. I’m not sure of that yet, but it seems we’re close.”
-
Facebook’s new development platform looks fantastic – very rich, very unusual for its sector.
-
What it says on the tin.
-
The best products came from those odd teams that managed to compromise. The technology was clumsy and the emotional benefits of the software shaky. But it was better than the crap that customer had to put up with before.
-
PdfCompress is a Mac OS X utility for reducing the size of PDF files.