BrightBoard

scene from movie

I borrowed a digital-8 camcorder from a friend - thanks, William! - because I wanted to salvage some footage from a few old Hi-8 tapes, which will soon be completely obsolete and unreadable.

The main thing I wanted to save was a little 2-minute clip about BrightBoard, the project which formed the bulk of my PhD work. This 'video figure' was done at the end of 1995 to accompany a paper I presented at the CHI96 conference. Click the picture to see a much younger and thinner Quentin... [12MB Quicktime H.264]

E-Mail Is So Five Minutes Ago

A Business Week article suggesting that email's role is... well... if not superseded then at least diminishing rapidly.

I think rumours of its death have been somewhat exaggerated. But as my spam filters, of necessity, become ever more stringent, so I have to spend more time reading the logs to check for unjustified rejections. There may well be scope for wider adoption of an email model where, by default, no messages are allowed, and you have to contact me in person and get a code before I can receive any messages from you...

Still, the gist of this article is that email's often not a very efficient way to communicate, and they may be right there.

Tickr for Flickr

If you have a Mac and you don't need to get any work done for a bit... Tickr for Flickr is remarkably addictive. You type a word into its search box and it displays, along one side of your screen, a scrolling band of photos which have that tag on Flickr. It's very nicely done. If you want some good words to get started, try 'coniston', 'scuba' or 'night'...

iMac Extended

Apologies to those of you not interested in Mac-related posts. I expect the current flurry to die down soon!

I noticed a subtle but interesting change in the graphics specs for the new Intel-based iMac:

For the first time ever, iMac lets you use a second display in extended desktop mode, in addition to simply mirroring the first.
In the past, the iMac and the iBook have supported external displays but only as a clone of the main one, unlike the PowerMac and PowerBook. This was never a hardware limitation, only a marketing decision and there's a good reliable hack to get over that foolishness. But it's nice to see it won't be necessary.

Hopeful news from the USPTO

Quoted on Paul Bissex's blog:

Last month, USPTO representatives met with members of the open source software community...The meeting focused on getting the best prior art references to the examiner during the initial examination process.
I've always felt that published applications on the patent offices' websites needed a button labelled 'Click here to report possibly relevant prior art'. Maybe this is a step closer to that goal.

ExpressCard

One thing my new MacBook won't have is a PCMCIA (PC Card) slot. I've been rather fond of this on my old Powerbook - a CF card adaptor lives there permanently, and it means that I can always get photos off my camera without the need for cables.

CFCF adaptor

The new machines have an ExpressCard slot. This is the replacement for the old PC Card standard; it has been around for a while and has lots of advantages, but I haven't seen any cards for it yet, and the slot is too small for a Compact Flash adaptor, so it'll be back to cables, I guess, for transferring my photos.