All posts by dispar

Wishlists and Dreaming

I like how the OpenMoko people think.

Alcohol meter

Give the phone some info about your body (gender, size, weigth) and when/what you drink and it will compute an approximation of the amount of alcohol in your blood. Updates automatically, could have an alarm, when you are probably sober again. See, for example (German text) http://www.misterio-online.de/promille.htm

Wish List – OpenMoko

OpenMoko is an Open Source project for cellular phone software. It seems quite active and they have a current version of the software running on an actual phone. So it’s not just vapourware, AFAICT.

The whole wishlist is certainly worth a read. Full of neat ideas, some of which are trivial to implement, others are much more ambitious. For those who care about creativity, innovation, and technological sophistication, this is exactly the kind of project which shows the power of dreaming.

Or maybe I’m just recognising other “benevolent inventors.” 😉

Whatever this feeling is, OpenMoko might drive my dream phone in the not-so-distant future!

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Joe the Ninja

He’s been called a rogue ninja. And I think he deserves a raise. Whatever he’s getting.

“Rogue ninjas”… I wonder if we can get that on our business cards.

Best compliment ever « whateverblog.

Well, these days, I’m doing “evaluation of quality” surveys over the phone so I often hear about people who apparently deserve praises and raises. Joe Cheng is probably one such person. Chances are that so do other people on the WLW team.

What’s WLW? Windows Live Writer, a blog editor developed as a Microsoft project. Mentioned it in previous entries about blog editors. It’s become the most popular standalone blog editor for WordPress.com:

Obviously some of you have already discovered the coolness that is Windows Live Writer because we found it was our most used blogging client,

Windows Live Writer FTW « WordPress.com

It’s in fact the app I’m using right now to post this entry. It has plenty of neat features including a nicer link management than I imagined.

So, a nice little app that can be useful. World-changing? Maybe not.

Now, why would I want Joe to get a raise? Simple: responsiveness. The keyword that I would associate with getting a clue.

This Joe Cheng character actually posted three (count them) comments on my blog about WLW. True, I had mentioned a bug I got and a report was sent somewhere. But, man, talk about dedication! Not only did he post three separate comments on my lowly blog but those comments were actually useful, straightforward, and at exactly the right tone

Added to this is the transparency of Joe’s own blog. Microsoft seems to have learned something from the Scoble era. Now, I’m clearly not a Microsoft fanboy and some of my comments about the company might have been a bit harsh, on occasion. In fact, I still think that some of Microsoft’s practises were, erm, beyond the pale. Not that Joe and the rest of the WLW team really change anything about this but, you know, I like to give credit where credit is due and I like quality work enough to reassess my opinion of a company based on some things that are done well.

So, for the record: WLW actually comes close to my dream blog editor in terms of accessing a browser history when adding links. If it could actually access my cross-browser history through Google Web History and social bookmarks (including links added to previous blog entries), I might really start singing the praises of that development team.

Until then, I may merely say that Joe deserves praises.

Hey, it’s something!

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blog Editors, Yet Again

Not that these things matter so much to me. I’m perfectly ok with writing posts directly in a browser. But I like it when there are better solutions.

As it took me almost an hour to refresh WordPress categories in Flock, I’ve taken this, my main blog, out of Flock. Too bad, though, as I have a kind of investment in this blog. Not that it’s likely that Flock will become my main editor but I did notice that I have a tendency to use my personal Blogspot blog more while I’m giving Flock a whirl.

I’m writing this in Windows Live Writer. Yesterday, it crashed miserably while I was simply switching blogs. As WLW is in beta, I wasn’t that surprised and I should have used this as an opportunity to help out the developers. But I kind of lost my patience with beta software. I used to love beta software and didn’t mind the occasional crash. But I need to improve my workflow and not be bogged down with bugged down software.

WLW does seem like a well-planned editor but I already see a few quirks. Like the fact that there’s no easy way to activate a “spell as you type” feature. I’m guessing the feature is there but it’s not very easy to find.

The categories menu for this blog doesn’t allow for direct addition of categories in the categories field. You can add categories by opening the list and adding categories from there. Makes sense for blogs which have reasonable numbers of categories but since WordPress.com blogs have categories serving as tags, it’d be useful to add categories directly. Of course, it’s easy to add Technorati tags and I’m guessing that commonly used tags are somehow kept in the interface. But I prefer to use WordPress categories as tags because they work as both links from WordPress.com and as actual Technorati tags.

But WLW has some cool features. Like the link glossary which seems to be relatively close to what I was wishful-thinking about yesterday. Actually, I quite like the “Insert Hyperlink” interface as it’s very elegant, it’s just a keystroke away (ctrl-k), it’s fully keyboard-operatable, it has access to previous posts on the author’s blogs (including entries posted by other authors on collaborative blogs), and it can add some link properties like XFN. Good job! Now, if I can just have access to my complete Web history and favourites using some kind of cross-platform synchronisation mechanism à la Google Browser Sync, I’m happy.

WLW also has some neat features like blog stats and comments. This might explain why so many WordPress.com bloggers use it as their main blog editor.

We’ll see how this goes.

Flock as Blog Editor

Now that Flock has a “spell as you type” feature, I can give it a fair shake as a blog editor.
Flock 0.9 Beta Release Notes | Flock
Thing is, though, it seems to have a problem with my main blog‘s extremely long list of categories. When I tried posting a blog entry with my WordPress.com blog account listed among the others, Flock became unresponsive as it was trying to download all my categories (all 2,751 of them). Maybe I could have waited longer but after a number of minutes without being able to use my computer at all, I decided to let it go.
Still, it made me a bit cranky. So the rest of this post will sound like a rant. It’s more like wishful thinking, though. I like wishful thinking.
I don’t like the way Flock’s blog editor handles link insertion. Sure, like any WYSIWYG editor out there, it has a button on which you can click to add an appropriate URL to text you’ve selected. But there’s no clear shortcut for this button and it could be much more powerful than it currently is.
Qumana has a better way to handle links. For one thing, it automatically inserts the clipboard’s content in the URL section of link insertion dialog box. And since it keeps published blog posts, it makes it easy to copy the “permalink” to another blog entry (for those bloggers, like me, who tend to be self-referential). Can’t remember off the top of my head but I’m pretty sure ecto and Windows Live Writer have similar features.
Ok… Flock does have this drag and drop interface for “media streams” (basically, Flickr or PhotoBucket accounts) and for “Web snippets” (local content, including text and links). Good idea and I guess I could make my “bloggable content” available to me while blogging by adding lots of content to my Flock installation and Flickr account. Makes a lot of sense for those who mostly use blogs as placeholders. But it’s still not the ideal method for blogs which rely on more extensive writing. Or for message writing.

What I want is pretty obvious but I haven’t found it yet, even in dedicated blog editors. I want my blog editor to have access to all of my links (Web history, favourites, social bookmarks…) and make it easy to work with those links while I’m writing. Sure, a “Web Snippets” feature is useful. But it still requires a fair amount of mouse movement to simply insert a link. Call me lazy but I prefer limiting my mouse movement while I’m writing.
My dream editor would integrate all of my social bookmarks, Web histories, and address books in the same interface. I could use a keystroke and start typing to get access to those links and addresses that I use frequently. Why addresses? I want to use the same editor for writing blog posts and email messages. Why not? Messages and posts end up having very similar features anyway. As many sites label it, it’s all about “sharing content.”
(I’m not really into IM but, as logic would have it, the same features should work with IM as well.)

To me, the “killer feature” in modern browsers is that auto-complete in the URL bar. I want to go back to a site I’ve visited recently, I just start typing the URL in the URL bar and the browser shows all related URLs. Same thing in Gmail: start typing an address and Gmail auto-completes it. So simple that nobody ever talks about it. But this simple feature is yet completely absent from blog editors, AFAICT.
Oh, sure, Flock does auto-complete in the search field. In fact, it supports incremental searches, which is really nice. But I need auto-complete for links and addresses.
What makes auto-complete even nicer is that it’s now possible to synchronise browsers through Google’s Browser Sync extension for Firefox (it might work with Flock too). Google also saves a Web History. And Gmail users get easy access to their address books from Google applications like Google Docs. And Google has toolbars for most browsers. So I guess Google could easily implement my dream editor.

Thing with my wishful thinking is that it’s often obvious enough that it becomes concrete very quickly after I say it. For all I know, this feature may exist somewhere and everybody else knows about it. But I’ve been missing it for a while now.
Ah, well.

Blogged with Flock

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Expérience du goût

Viens de finir une tasse d’un des cafés les plus complexes que j’aie bus jusqu’à maintenant. Pas parmi les meilleurs. Mais, vraiment, une expérience gustative particulière.

L’ai fait dans ma cafetière Brikka. Le mélange de café («Kamikaze») provenait de l’épicerie vrac du Marché Jean-Talon où ils vendent leurs cafés à 5$ la livre entre 9h et 10h. J’ai ajouté quelques grains qui me restaient d’un mélange italien que j’avais acheté au même endroit un peu plus tôt, histoire d’ajouter à la complexité. Ça semble avoir fonctionné.

La première gorgée de ce café était une explosion de saveurs. Pas toutes extrêmement agréables, mais assez impressionnantes dans le tableau d’ensemble. Diverses saveurs de caramel, depuis le dulce de leche jusqu’au sucre candi en passant par le “butterscotch” et le caramel mou. Un peu de saveur de brûlé. Une rondeur qu’on monterait aux nues dans un expresso mais qui est fréquente dans une cafetière moka. Du rôti, de l’amaretto, un arrière-goût de sécheresse. Une palette très foncée dans l’ensemble, mais une telle variété de saveurs que chaque gorgée se déroulait comme un histoire complète.

C’est ce genre d’expérience que je recherche. Pas «le meilleur café au monde». Mais le café qui vient me dire quelque-chose. C’est la même chose pour la musique ou pour les gens. Je ne cherche pas «le meilleur de chaque chose». J’aime la diversité, la variété, la complexité.

Amitié, fierté

Mes amis, je suis fier de vous! Vous êtes tous fascinants et vous provenez de milieux très différents. On ne peut demander mieux.

Samedi dernier, Catherine et moi avons fêté notre septième anniversaire de mariage. Oui, oui. C’était bien le 7 juillet 2007. Officiellement, nous nous sommes mariés le 4 juillet 2000 à Moncton, au Nouveau-Brunswick. Nous avons célébré la fête de notre mariage à Laval, au Québec, le 8 juillet 2000. L’anniversaire de Catherine est le 2 juillet. Le mien le 10. Donc, ce samedi, 7 juillet 2007, était la journée idéale pour célébrer.

Et nous avons célébré. L’amitié, surtout.

Dans ma famille, nous nous amusons parfois à annoncer, d’un ton sentencieux que «dans la vie, virgule…». Eh bien: «dans la vie, virgule, il est important de bien s’entourer». Je ne saurais être plus fier de ceux qui m’entourent. Des gens de toutes sortes. D’âges divers. De milieux différents. D’intérêts variés. Tous plus intéressants les uns que les autres. «Du bon monde», comme on dit. «Dis-moi qui tu hantes et je te dirai qui tu es». Si mes amis sont une indication de qui je suis, je suis fier comme Artaban.

J’ai abandonné l’humilité, il y a quelques temps. Pas que je me considère mieux que d’autres. Je suis simplement content de ce que je vis et même de ce que je suis. Dans ce cas-ci, je suis réellement fier de notre couple quand à notre capacité à réunir les gens. Nous n’avons eu que très peu de choses à faire pour que des gens puissent se rencontrer et, je crois, avoir du plaisir.

Que voulez-vous, je suis un papillon social. Et je crois sincèrement qu’un papillon social peut avoir un effet intéressant sur les groupes sociaux qui l’entourent.

Et c’est pour ça que j’aime Facebook. Pas nécessairement à cause du système lui-même. Mais parce que plusieurs de mes amis sont venus se lier à moi sur ce réseau, ce qui peut éventuellement permettre à certains d’entre eux de se rencontrer à travers ma présence sur le réseau social virtuel. C’est pas le nombre de connexions qui m’importe. C’est le fait que ces connexions soient si diverses.

Notre anniversaire de mariage était moins achalandé que notre fête de mariage. D’après moi, il y a eu une quarantaine de personnes au total, au lieu des quatre-vingt personnes qui sont venues à notre mariage. Mais ce qui était génial ce samedi, c’était la capacité de tout le monde à se mêler aux autres. Pas de petites cliques, pas d’exclusion. Des gens que je n’aurais jamais cru compatibles qui passent la soirée à discuter. Des tas de petites coïncidences qui lient des amis des Catherine aux miens. Des clins d’oeil et peut-être des amitiés durables.

Si vous me connaissez et que vous ne pouviez pas venir à notre anniversaire de mariage, n’hésitez pas à venir vous ajouter à mes amis sur Facebook. Ou LinkedIn. Ou MySpace. Ou MontrealLinkup, Geni, Classmates, Flickr, LiveJournal, Skype, Flixster, Ringo, WAYN, Del.icio.us, Twitter, Jaiku, Spurl, Plum. Ou tout autre réseau virtuel auquel il vous sied d’appartenir.

Dans tout ça, je dois remercier ma chère Catherine. Non seulement je rencontre des tas de gens grâce à elle, mais c’est avec elle que je peux être moi-même.

Merci!

iPhone Wishlist

Yeah, everybody’s been talking about the iPhone. It’s last week’s story but it can still generate a fair bit of coverage. People are already thinking about the next models.

Apple has most of the technology to build what would be my dream handheld device but the iPhone isn’t it. Yet.

My wishful thinking for what could in fact be the coolest handheld ever. Of course, the device should have the most often discussed features which the iPhone currently misses (Flash, MMS, chat…). But I’m going much further, here.

  • Good quality audio recording (as with the recording add-ons for the iPod 5G).
  • Disk space (say, 80GB).
  • VoIP support (Skype or other, but as compatible as possible).
  • Video camera which can face the user (for videoconference).
  • Full voice interface: speech recognition and text-to-speech for dialing, commands, and text.
  • Handwriting recognition.
  • Stylus support.
  • Data transfer over Bluetooth.
  • TextEdit.
  • Adaptive technology for word recognition.
  • Not tied to cellular provider contract.
  • UMA Cell-to-WiFi (unlicensed mobile access).
  • GPS.
  • iLife support.
  • Sync with Mac OS X and Windows.
  • Truly international cellular coverage.
  • Outliner.
  • iWork support.
  • Disk mode.
  • Multilingual support.
  • Use as home account on Mac OS X “host.”
  • FrontRow
  • USB and Bluetooth printing.
  • Battery packs with standard batteries.

The key point here isn’t that the iPhone should be a mix between an iPod and a MacBook. I’m mostly thinking about the fact that the “Personal” part of the “PC” and “PDA” concepts has not come to fruition yet. Sure, your PC account has your preferences and some personal data. Your PDA contains your contacts and to-do lists. But you still end up with personal data in different places. Hence the need for Web apps. As we all know, web apps are quite useful but there’s still room for standalone applications, especially on a handheld. It wouldn’t take much for the iPhone to be the ideal tool to serve as a “universal home” where a user can edit and output files. To a musician or podcaster, it could become the ideal portable studio.

But where the logical step needs to be taken is in “personalization.” Apparently, the iPhone’s predictive keyboard doesn’t even learn from the user’s input. Since the iPhone is meant to be used by a single individual, it seems quite strange that it does not, minimally, adapt to typed input. Yet with a device already containing a headset it seems to me that speech technologies could be ideal. Full-text continuous speech recognition already exists and what it requires is exactly what the iPhone could provide: adaptation to a user’s voice and speech patterns. Though it may be awkward for people to use a voice interface in public, cellphones have created a whole group of people who seem to be talking to themselves. 😉

Though very different from speech recognition, text-to-speech could integrate really well with a voice-driven device. Sharing the same “dictionaries” across all applications on the same device, the TTS and SR features could be trained very specifically to a given user. While screens have been important on computers for quite a while, voice-activated computers have been prominent in science-fiction for probably as long. The most common tasks done on computers (writing messages, making appointments, entering data, querying databases…) could all be done quite effectively through a voice interface. And the iPhone could easily serve as a voice interface for other computers.

Yes, I’m nightdreaming. It’s a good way to get some rest.

Smells Like Geek Spirit

Ok, too easy. But this piece does mention odours:

Take off your suit pants and jacket — It’s Web 2.0 – Blogs – Code Monkey Business – Builder AU

And, as always, I’m fascinated by geek culture. I associate with it, to an extent, even though I am not a coder.

It’s still really funny, all these parallels between the Net boom of the mid-to-late 90’s and the rather recent “Web 2.0” discussions.

«Que sont mes amis devenus?»

Y’a pas que Rutebeuf qui soit nostalgique… 😉

À travers ma quête, quelques noms de personnes que j’ai de la difficulté à contacter.

  • Chantal Bonenfant (Pontmain) [Trouvée!]
  • Christian Fortier (Pontmain, 19è de la Vérendrye)
  • Mathieu Nelson (19è de la Vérendrye)
  • Éric Dumont (19è de la Vérendrye)
  • Simon Vaillancourt (MDLS) [Un ami commun m’a reparlé de lui.]
  • Isabelle Jutras (MDLS)
  • Jean-Pierre Ross (MDLS)
  • Michel Reed (MDLS, BBSL)
  • Dany Provencher (BBSL)
  • Claude Fortier (Quatuor Connivence)
  • Stéphane Grégoire (Quatuor Connivence)
  • François Tourigny (UdeM)
  • Mél-Anye Côté (Allô-Stop)