Monday, July 19, 2004

Blogger fixing Firefox Mess

Quick Notes Blog: July 2004
Blogger redid their interface. They trashed Safari and Firefox immediately (who do they work for again?).

As of today Safari is no worse than it was (but no better). Firefox 0.91/Mac is looking reasonably good, though font are a bit off when posting.

Firefox 0.91 feels slooooowww on my iBook. Just teething issues I hope ...

Korea -- land of the future ....

Samsung SPH-2300: 3 Megapixel Cameraphone
The future is now. Unfortunately, the future is now in Korea, a land filled with a fine people and such, don't get me wrong, but a land that is also, clearly, not right here in my apartment. So with Samsung's introduction of a new 3-megapixel cameraphone, the SPH-2300, we Westerners have all been apparently flung backwards into the past, which is cool from a 'countdown to death' perspective, but otherwise, you know, I'd rather just have my 3-megapixel cameraphone -- especially one with optical zoom, miniSD slot, and built-in flash.

Japan used to be the land of tomorrow, now it's Korea. Given my robust personal connections to Korea, I feel a certain (adoptive) filial pride here.

Google for airport conditions...

Google Web Search Features: "To see delays and weather conditions at a particular airport, type the airport's three letter code followed by the word 'airport.' For example, San Francisco International Airport updates can be found by searching for 'sfo airport.'"

Review: Beyerdynamic DT 880 headphones

DansData: Beyerdynamic DT 880 headphones
Among music lovers blessed with more sense than money, though, it is generally accepted that the DT 880s are serious contenders for World's Best Headphones.

I don't want to spoil the surprise, or anything, but yes, they're worth the money.

About $260 in the US Dan says. They'd need an amplifier if uses with an iPod, so overkill there.

Dan on Firewire

Dan's Data - PC hardware and gadget reviews!

Dan emailed me with an answer to a Firewire/USB question. These numbers are a bit hard to find, so for reference:
... USB is, as mentioned above, 500mA at 5V; FireWire can theoretically deliver up to 40V at 1.5 amps, though I don't know whether any FireWire adapter that can actually do that has ever been made. PC FireWire adapters run from the regular PSU 12V rail, and so can't deliver more than 12V at (mumble) amps, but even that's beyond the capabilities of USB.

It's easy enough to make an iPod charger that runs from a plugpack, car cigarette lighter or what have you, though; these go to a FireWire plug with only the power and ground terminals connected. You don't have to hack one up yourself, either; many exist in the commercial market:

http://froogle.google.com/froogle?q=%22ipod+charger%22

Some are more practical than others, though:
http://www.engadget.com/entry/7288631317563720/
I love Dan's site -- I learn more there in a few minutes than any other site I visit.

Sunday, July 18, 2004

The Psychology of Persuasion: often the classics are still best

Amazon.com: Books: Influence (rev) : The Psychology of Persuasion

I came to this book via a ciruitious route. I'd been interested in a recently published text on marketing, but reviewer comments favored this 1983 text (revised in the early 1990s). I've not read it all, but my sampling has been rewarding. I recognize much of the material from my cognitive science studies @ 1994, but it's very elegantly presented and placed into a corporate context. The author is a student of con artists and manipulators of every stripe, and he regales us with all the tricks of the trade.

I consider myself a hard case (of course everyone does), but I can see how I've fallen for a few of the tricks here. Of course one might say I was paying for entertainment rather than for nothing, but the line is subtle.

The scary thing is that this represents the state of marketing in the 1990s. Since then we've begun to deploy functional MRI scans in marketing research. What hope do we chumps have?

Blogger's GUI upgrade is a mess! Why?

Blogger: Dashboard
Blogger redid their interface. They trashed Safari and Firefox immediately (who do they work for again?).

They've fixed the Safari bugs, albeit still with a very minimal and incomplete interface. It's no better than it was, but no worse.

The Firefox Blogger UI, however, is a complete mess -- comical really.

What does this say about Blogger's internal processes and Google's resources? Is Google running out of money?