Fleet St and St Paul’s Cathedral tonight.
Fleet St and St Paul’s Cathedral tonight.
Leaving a college late last night… passed a girl talking on her phone… “Oh… Psalms are my faves…”
Most of you will know by now that my company, Camvine, makes a particularly cunning lightweight digital signage system – that’s ‘screens on walls’ – which we call CODA.
One of the fun things about CODA is that it’s entirely web-based, and can link to other internet-based sources of data. This month, on the camvine Twitter feed, we’re going to be posting one example per day of fun and interesting things you can do with CODA.
The first one, appropriately, was a little PHP script that would allow you to display your Twitter feed on a CODA screen. This is an example, by the way, of what makes these social networks work for me. I don’t have to keep going back to their web pages or run lots of applications that get buried on my desktop. Amidst various newspaper front pages, weather forecasts, recent photos, my CODA screen also shows me my friends’ blogs, my Twitter and Facebook feeds, my diary and the company calendar… and I notice them when I walk past the screen to get a coffee, for example. it’s almost a way of picking up on the activities of your social world out of your peripheral vision.
I think this needs a name. I’m calling it ambient social networking.
The back of a Sony battery pack advertises a different model, which promises ‘Absolute Power’.
Well! I’m not buying any of those! Don’t they know that it corrupts absolutely?
The Blackstone Key has a different title in German:
Miss Mary and the Secret Document. I think they’re planning on a ‘Miss Mary and…’ series.
My friend Phil Endecott has just released a rather interesting iPhone app: Panoramascope.
It can identify the various peaks visible from your current location, which, if you start to think carefully about what that involves, is actually quite clever. And, if you take a photo with your phone, you can overlay the app’s view on your photo.
If, like me, you live in a place where peaks are things you dream of going to see on holiday, it can have more prosaic uses, like telling you where nearby pubs or tourist attractions can be found. You can also save locations, so you can look fondly back at the view you had last summer from the top of the Matterhorn.
Start by loading some overlay sets – in my case, European placenames, peaks, and pubs – and then you can search for a location, which is generally much easier than entering latitude and longitude. Here’s part of the view from Coniston Old Man:
This will work on an iPod Touch, but you really want an iPhone for the GPS and camera facilities.
Available from The iTunes store, of course, but there’s a lot more information available at Panoramascope.com.
Update: Ha! If the thought of viewing all those glorious peaks makes you feel exhausted, and you’re more interested in the pub-finding options, Phil also has something just for you!
Some Swedish parents are trying (in vain) to name their son ‘Q’.
People of great taste and discernment, obviously.
Thanks to Abi for the link
A puddle paddle.
Six months ago, I bought a new Energizer battery charger because I needed one which would handle AAA batteries as well as AAs. I commented at the time on my surprise at its incorporation of a big fan and a whopping great power supply – needed because it can recharge batteries in 15-20 mins.
Well, six months on, I’m… well… a big fan. I get through a lot of batteries, and the fact that this can turn empty ones into full ones in the time I need to turn a full cup of coffee into an empty one is a wonderful asset – I now have a constant supply of power.
It is a little sniffy about which batteries it will take, though, and turns up its nose at my attempts to use some of my more elderly rechargables. This is probably sensible, since it’s about to pump considerable amounts of current into them. All the Energizer cells I’ve procured to use with it, though, have been just fine.
And then I wondered if this was deliberate. You see, there’s a big business opportunity here. Batteries are a necessity now, and if you can come up with ones that have some cool features — extra-long-life, built in LCD meters, perhaps, or the ability to change colour based on current consumption or charge level — then you could do quite well. (USBCELL is a nice example.) I like the idea of batteries which learn their typical use patterns and can communicate with others in the same device, so they can tell you that you’ll only get about two hours’ use, and it’s mostly the fault of the one on the left there.
But suppose you also come up with a cool charger, perhaps which incorporates a travel adaptor, the ability to charge from USB, to recharge your phone, a built-in solar trickle-charger… hey, it could include an MP3 player. Everything else does. You sell it really cheap. Everyone wants one. But you make it so that it only effectively recharges your batteries, and your batteries need to be charged by it. Perhaps the batteries have unique IDs and the charger can log information about them and display it. Maybe it could even order new ones for you when it thinks you need them.
Anyway, people might then invest a reasonable amount in your particular brand, and you then have an ongoing revenue model which I’m sure could make for a good MBA project, at least!
Time for some market research. What killer features would you like in your batteries?
This time, the River Cam, on a day when the water was unusually clear.
If you’re a spider, and you rely on catching your prey by surprise, then a frost like yesterday’s must be rather inconvenient.
© Copyright Quentin Stafford-Fraser
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