Archive of January 2008
Google Check
No idea how this would be implemented, but I always thought it would be cool if, in addition to using a big dictionary file, word processing programs queried google for spell checks – if there’s a “did you mean” it could offer that as a correction suggestion, otherwise it’s probably a real word. (or last name, slang word, made up Web 2.0 startup word, weblish word, etc) This would be slower than looking at a local file, of course, so maybe it would only be used once the normal spell check comes up empty.
Language is constantly evolving, and no one knows more about the huge mass of language that is the web than google…
05:49 PM | 0 CommentsThe Visual Browsing Revolution
Everyone knows that if you spend two minutes clicking links on Wikipedia it’s easy to get lost in the tangled web of interrelations. But to visualize the connections, your best option is to get out pencil and paper, and to reconstruct your conceptual journey is a painstaking troll through your history.
The very words Internet and Web evoke an interconnected mesh of links and ideas – yet, save the mind’s eye, there’s no way to see it.
That’s why projects like Thinkmap’s Visual Thesaurus, Youtube’s Warp, Digg’s Swarm and Jonathan Harris and Sep Kamvar’s We Feel Fine (I’m working on an alternate way to browse wikipedia myself) are so exciting.
I think, in terms of interface design, we are now at the same kind of turning point we were in in the 1980’s. Then, the only way to interact with a computer was to type in commands. Then emerged the GUI – suddenly there were “windows,” a “desktop,” “icons,” “pulldown menus” – the computer was now a space in which to work – people could understand the concepts of files and programs when files were represented by icons and programs manifested themselves on windows – it was a whole higher level of interaction, and going back to typed commands in a 1-dimensional, text-filled world was inconceivable.
Once visual browsing becomes mainstream, in whatever form it takes, once the “web” of connections everyone loves to hype is plainly visible instead of only imagined and a person’s trip across the web’s vast surface is represented as more than flat list, a browser with tabs and a back button will seem as utterly crude as the command line seems to us window-slinging mouse jockeys today. (Even the mouse seems really crude compared to interfaces like Microsoft Surface and the iPhone) Kids our current age won’t be able to imagine browsing any other way.
So it’s time to realize that conventional browsing sucks, that Firefox 2.0.0.11 is not the ultimate state of the web browser, that one page at a time, even with our beloved tabs, is a terribly narrow slit through which to view the unprecedented mass expression of humanity that is the World Wide Web!
07:02 PM | 0 CommentsYoutube’s been busy – I don’t know how long this has been the case, but now, if you fullscreen the player and click the little new button next to the play button (where the “back to beginning” button was) and the new “Warp” player pops up.
As you can see, videos are represented as bubbles with little thumbnails inside ‘em – mouseover to get a description, keep your mouse there and more videos emerge and are strewn across the screen. Click to watch. The trail of videos you watch is represented by a line.
06:57 PM | 0 CommentsSimple English Wikipedia
My God, they (or should I say “we”) have thought of everything!
05:28 PM | 0 CommentsMartin Luther King, Jr.
In the recent dust-ups at thinking chair, none of the involved parties were completely in line.
So, let’s all take a moment today to remember a man who always acted with dignity and fairness in his battles, even in the face of tremendous unfairness, hatred, and even violence: Martin Luther King, Jr.
06:23 AM | 0 CommentsReassurance
No, the blogs at thinking chair aren’t dead. We’ve just been busy working on other parts of the site, like the wiki and the front page. Not to mention midterms. So you readers can sleep well at night again. Both of you. :D
06:24 PM | 0 Comments