
Question:
What's cool?
Man, this is cool:
"Sometimes you can't smooth these 'seams' away, and so seamful design is about taking account of these reminders of the finite, limited and physical nature of digital media. It's about deliberately but selectively revealing these seams to users, to let people make of them what they will. Seamful games are a means to try this kind of system design out, as well as an end in itself."
[1111]
6.26.2006

Question:
When will the pure physical, virtual, and ubi-quical converge, blend, and be seamless?
Cool:
"...Equator is a six-year Interdisciplinary Research Collaboration (IRC) supported by EPSRC that focuses on the integration of physical and digital interaction..."
[11]
Question:
How can you not be watched over if we default to harmlessness?
Check it:
"...Principle 1. Default to harmlessness. Ubiquitous systems must default to a mode that ensures their users’ (physical, psychic and financial) safety.
Principle 2. Be self-disclosing. Ubiquitous systems must contain provisions for immediate and transparent querying of their ownership, use, capabilities, etc., such that human beings encountering them are empowered to make informed decisions regarding exposure to same..."
[111]

Question:
Was I just thinking this? Well... something close... :)
Good thoughts:
"...part of what that means is that I get to spend a great deal of time with the people who use complex technological systems, devices and artifacts - systems, like the very one you’re reading this on, that have a great deal in common with those being dreamed at Ubicomp, the 'context-aware wearables,' 'face-responsive interfaces' and such."
[111]

Question:
When aren't you surrounded by computers?
Answers:
"Ubiquitous computing is roughly the opposite of virtual reality. Where virtual reality puts people inside a computer-generated world, ubiquitous computing forces the computer to live out here in the world with people. Virtual reality is primarily a horse power problem; ubiquitous computing is a very difficult integration of human factors, computer science, engineering, and social sciences."
[11]
6.23.2006

Question:
Why can't we be more creative to our problems?
Thoughts:
"...When he got dropped off, he walked to the other side, held up his sign and got paid to go back the other way too..."
[1]

Question:
What's shakin'?
Insights:
"...The pages have been battered, gouged, scorched by fire and blotched by fungus. Without the use of computer technology, they would be mostly unreadable."
[1]

Question:
You want to teach what while doing what?
Think on this:
"...Hyperbolic space is an unimaginable concept, unless you're a Latvian mathematician who's handy with needle and yarn..."
[1]

Question:
What's not for breakfast?
Answer:
Spam, ham, lamb, sam, and jam?
"...This latest build offers most of what an average Rails developer needs right out of the box! That includes :
* Ruby 1.8.4
* Rails 1.1.2
* Capistrano 1.1.0
* Mongrel 0.3.13
* Rake 0.7.1
* Subversion
* MySQL 4.1.12
* MySQL Administrator
* RadRails
* KDevelop
* Kate
* and many many others!"

Question:
What are you thinking about right now?
Answer:
1. How to constantly update your search skills and best blogs to read.
2. How to develop a customer-loyalty focus (beyond customer service.)
3. How to embrace innovation, and put into practice OODA.
4. How to use, deploy, and benefit from open source technologies from software to hardware to OPACs to social movements.
5. How increase your operations funding to customer-focused technology innitiatives.
6. Why any socio-information professional must understand myspace.com, youtube.com, facebook.com, blogger.com, flicker.com and the rise of social software.
7. Why we must use our professional conferences to germinate bleeding edge practices.
8. How to take better digital pictures by tweaking, hacking, mixing the settings on my a95 and then bringing in the GIMP.
9. How to cook Indian food.

