Subscribe to RSS feed

Aug
31

Will tomorrow’s world still need designers

This presents an obvious quandary to designers, who may be regarded as the agents of our salvation or our destruction when ‘the Singularity’ (or the nerdocalypse) arrives. As Mary Shelley so brilliantly depicted in Frankenstein, playing God can have tremendous costs. If we’re the first species to take over our own evolution, will designers live like Gods or be chronically unemployed?”

This vision of a rather elitist future of design was counterbalanced by a set of notions that implied a very different path for the world’s creative future — one that many designers with an instinct for self-preservation may treat with some dismay. On this end of the prediction spectrum I noticed a concentration on the external — an emphasis on transparency and simplicity and social responsibility. A belief that design that communicates its utility to the poorest 90% of the world will take precedence, and that mass design collaborations will serve a vaster public than professional designers have ever reached. This future of design would be world-changing and would mark a new direction for the practice of design — one that might not require designers.

And what comes along with all this amazing progress? A fear that we won’t be able to stay ahead of the game. As countless movies and sci-fi stories have told us, the terrorists could use this technology against us or the powerful computers that we’ve created could take over. While some critics have claimed that this is basically ‘the Rapture for nerds,’ Kurzweil — whose fan club includes Bill Gates, Marvin Minsky, and folks at the National Institute of Health — expects that by 2045, non-biological intelligence will be one billion times more powerful than all human intelligence today. Stanford’s Paul Saffo has asked, will this super intelligence treat us like pets or like food?

(Credit: Greatdreams) Johanna Blakley, Deputy Director at the USC Norman Lear Center, will moderate one of the most provocative panel discussions at SXSW Interactive next weekend: “Will Tomorrow’s World Still Need Designers?” Panelists include Alonzo Canada (Jump Associates), David Merkoski (frog design), and Helen Walters (BusinessWeek). In a blog post, Blakley has articulated some points that challenge the raison d’etre of a whole profession and will likely spark a heated debate:

Futurist Ray Kurzweil has predicted that $1,000 worth of computation in the 2020s will be 1,000 times more powerful than the human brain. The result? By 2020, greatly extended human longevity (and a cure for the common cold, thank God); by 2030, nanobots that can repair our bodies on the fly; by 2040, machine back-ups of human memories. In the same time frame, we’ll spend less time in front of computers and more time inside of them, working and playing in virtual worlds.

Much has been made of the consequences of democratizing design. Already, the designer’s responsibility has shifted from creating objects and experiences to creating the conditions for innovation — putting into the hands of the masses the tools to make their own designs. However, the threat to the livelihood of designers may well go beyond packs of online amateurs.

“At Davos this year, four luminaries in the world of design were asked to predict what the future of design will be. The themes that arose from this discussion seemed to coalesce into two distinct categories that I’d venture to call ‘internal’ and ‘external.’ On the one hand, the speakers emphasized the importance of privacy and personal convenience — a degree of customization we’ve not seen before, that will first be available, as usual, to the world’s wealthiest 10%. Designers will create ingenious objects with hidden multi-functionality, devices that, for one reason or another, cloak what they can really do. We’ll also see designers pressed to find ways to better protect trade secrets and the valued expertise of the genius creator — in other words, designers will be designing objects that actually enhance their own professional lives and buttress their privileged position in society.

Aug
30

LaCie releases 500GB rugged hard disk

We loved the previous models so much that we gave them our much coveted Editors’ Choice back in ’06, and we’re happy to see that LaCie stepped it up to an improved Hitachi Travelstar 5K500 2.5 inch internal hard drive. Like previous models, this also connects via USB 2.0, FireWire 400, and FireWire 800. Anyone making good use of the ruggedized body? We want to hear about how your LaCie Rugged Hard Drive withstood beats, stompings, animal attacks, elemental anomalies, and time travel.

(Credit: LaCie)

The 500 GB LaCie Rugged Hard Disk is available now for $340 for the USB 2.0 model; $400 for the FireWire 800, FireWire 400 and USB 2.0 model.

Ninjas, John Locke, and Bear Grylls take note: your active lifestyle have nothing on the LaCie Rugged Hard Disk. But even if you’re not trekking through the trenches and sinister islands, you’ll still appreciate LaCie’s latest version of their rugged hard disk with an impressive 500GB capacity.

(Credit: LaCie)

Aug
30

Flaw turns Gmail into spamming machine

This isn’t the first Google tool to appeal to spammers. In April, my colleague Elinor Mills reported that spammers were now using Google Calendar.

A “serious security flaw” in Gmail turns Google’s e-mail service into a spamming machine, according to a recent security report.

INSERT, the Information Security Research Team, has created a proof of concept that exploits the “trust hierarchy” that exists between mail service providers. By exploiting a flaw in the way Google forwards messages, a spammer can send thousands of bulk e-mails through Google’s SMTP service, bypassing Google’s 500-address bulk e-mail limit and identity fraud protections.

Google has offered no official comment on the report.

INSERT’s report notes that no extraordinary Internet expertise is necessary to exploit the flaw:

The report notes that with the rising volume of spam, e-mail providers have turned to whitelists and blacklists to help root out IP addresses of known spammers. Because Gmail falls into the trusted-whitelist category, messages are allowed “carte blanche” to bypass spam filtering.

In this regard, this document presents a vulnerability report and a proof-of-concept attack that demonstrate how anyone with no special Internet access privileges other than being able to connect to SMTP (TCP port 25) and HTTP (TCP port 80) servers is able to exploit a single Gmail account in order to be granted nearly unrestricted access to Google’s massive whitelisted SMTP relay infrastructure.

Aug
26

Facebook to open the gates with ‘Facebook Connect’

Social network Facebook announced Friday the debut of Facebook Connect, a new technology for members to connect their profile data and authentication credentials to external Web sites. It makes the company the latest major Web site to embrace the concept of data portability.

No partner Web sites for Facebook Connect have been announced yet, but director of platform Ben Ling explained to CNET News.com that “there’s been a lot of partner interest.” One partner, however, was displayed in mockups on Facebook’s developer blog: social news site Digg.

Through Facebook Connect, members will be able to use their Facebook identities across the Web–profile photos, names, photos, friends, groups, events, and other information. Facebook profile content, for example, could appear on other social sites, and Facebook event listings could theoretically connect with external event and invitation services.

The technical details also remain unannounced. “We’re not announcing the details of the partner integration today,” Ling said. “What we’re announcing at a high level is that we will have a program that’s built into partners large and small, and they will be able to access Facebook Connect.”

This post was updated at 1:56 p.m. PDT.

“These are just a few steps Facebook is taking to make the vision of data portability a reality for users worldwide,” Morin wrote in his blog post. “We believe the next evolution of data portability is about much more than data. It’s about giving users the ability to take their identity and friends with them around the Web, while being able to trust that their information is always up to date and always protected by their privacy settings.”

Facebook kick-started the social-networking developer platform craze when it launched the Facebook Platform a year ago. But on Thursday, bigger rival MySpace made a big move when it opened its own profile content to outside sites–in a sense the reverse of Facebook’s famous decision to welcome external developers onto its own site. Facebook representatives said Friday that there are now more than 350,000 developers from 225 countries developing for the platform, although one prominent programmer said earlier this week that he believes activity may be slowing.

Last month, Facebook started partnering with other social sites to pull external data into Facebook’s “mini-feeds,” displaying user activity from the likes of Flickr and Yelp on Facebook profile pages.

Facebook will handle the authentication process, and while privacy controls have not been made clear, the company has stressed that user security will be a priority. And there’s reason to believe Facebook will be particularly careful: The company already partners with outside services to share data in its Beacon advertising program, and the PR missteps surrounding Beacon’s launch are something that Facebook likely does not want to repeat.

The formal announcement was made through a post on Facebook’s developer blog by senior platform manager Dave Morin, who has been one of the company’s most visible evangelists in the developer community over the past year. Facebook Connect will launch within the next few weeks.

Facebook has also held over 50 “developer garage” events in 10 countries, and Ling said that Facebook Connect will be discussed at future “garages.”

Representatives from MySpace were not immediately available for comment.

MySpace has partnered with the likes of eBay and Yahoo for Data Availability, which means that many of the Web’s biggest names are now warming up to the idea of social-network identity portability. It’s likely to be popular with users eager to quell the onset of “social fatigue” from too many logins and profiles, but privacy and security advocates may raise a red flag–as might advertisers, to whom Facebook’s walled-in user base was ideal for targeted marketing. Spreading that data across the Web could complicate matters on that front.

It’s a big move for the site. Until this point, Facebook has had a reputation for keeping its cards close to its chest–even banning the account of popular blogger Robert Scoble when he used a script to export his Facebook contact list to Plaxo. But Facebook has a representative in the Data Portability Workgroup, and executives have said that Facebook has wanted to bring its information outside the site eventually.

One Facebook insider, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said to CNET News.com that the project had been in the works for quite some time, and said the announcement wasn’t issued as a response to MySpace’s “Data Availability” project. “We actually think what they are up to is pretty cool.”

“We believe the next evolution of data portability is about much more than data. It’s about giving users the ability to take their identity and friends with them around the Web, while being able to trust that their information is always up to date and always protected by their privacy settings.” –Dave Morin, Facebook senior platform manager

Aug
26

Wireless industry going through its AOL phase

By 1996 or 1997, however, the entire market had changed to meet demand for flat-rate pricing, again mirrored by the recent actions of the carriers to provide all-you-can-download plans. Once subscriber revenues were fixed at a certain number, the ISPs needed to find advertising and service revenues to keep growing. And that’s what the current mobile industry needs: “The next phase is advertising and commerce growth–who’s going to get the $1 trillion in value (that’s up for grabs)?” Bulkeley wondered.

But the trends are undeniable. Rajeev Chand, managing director and wireless analyst at Rutberg & Co., noted some statistics that ESPN released just after the end of the last NFL season. On the last weekend of the season–when football fans were captivated by the thrilling New England Patriots-New York Giants game–ESPN’s mobile site recorded more hits than its regular site.

The devices themselves also need to change, Bulkeley said. “These devices aren’t meant to navigate a portal page, but they are best suited when you know what you want to get and you go right to it,” he said. Bulkeley’s new company is trying to get the mobile industry to support bar-code scanning, where mobile users can take a snapshot of a bar code in a store and get instant information regarding a product or service.

CORONADO, Calif.–It’s the mid-1990s for the mobile industry: lots of walled gardens, lots of fragmentation, and lots of promise.

We’ve been writing about the future of mobile computing for years now, and it’s no surprise that panelists at the Future in Review conference are eyeing the same space. There’s a clear shift going on toward mobile computing, seen both in the PC space, as notebooks overtake designs, and in the evolving handheld/subnotebook space with a surge in interest in smartphones and things like the Eee PC.

Moderator Chetan Sharma, Telestra's Hugh Bradlow, and Yahoo's Gary Roshak (left to right) listen to a fellow panelist discuss mobile computing.

However, it’s just not enough to capture the traffic, as any ex-AOLer knows.

(Credit:
Tom Krazit/CNET News.com)

“We learned from the first phase that whoever controls the traffic and monetizes it, wins,” Bulkeley said.

The current mobile situation reminds Jonathan Bulkeley, formerly of AOL and currently CEO of ScanBuy, of his days at the once-ubiqituous ISP in the mid-1990s. Companies like AOL, Prodigy, and CompuServe offered metered access to the Internet in those days and strictly controlled what the user accessed on those networks; just as mobile ISPs like Verizon, AT&T, and Sprint have done for many years until recently.

Before that comes to pass, however, a few things have to change. Hugh Bradlow, chief technology office for Australian carrier Telstra, bemoaned the current fragmented state of the mobile software industry. “The handset industry is in an absolutely shocking state,” he said, noting that mobile application developers are faced with way too many competing platforms for their products.

Yahoo is trying to completely bypass that issue by focusing on mobile widgets, said Gary Roshak, vice president of mobile advertisers and publishers at the company. “The world doesn’t need another phone operating system. We don’t really care if you run on (the various operating systems). We want to fuel these mobile-first experiences.”

Aug
24

Friday Poll Which summer movie hit the comic book

Anyway, this poll will probably still be a popularity contest. Oh, and remember to check back next Friday–and every Friday thereafter until the end of time–to vote in our Crave weekly poll.

View results

I suggested the “Best Comic Book Movies of the Summer.” Thing is, comic book movies are way too mainstream these days to be considered “geeky.” Also, The Dark Knight would predictably clean up, followed by Iron Man and then everything else.

Iron Man: but I never heard of him ’til 2008.
The Incredible Hulk: didn’t that come out in 2003?
Hellboy 2: even though I’ve never read a Hellboy comic.
Wanted: wait, that was comic-based?
The Dark Knight: because of Heath.
Hancock: uh, can’t fool me!

So you wanna get really geeky? We’ll get really geeky. How about the “Most Faithful Comic Book Adaptation of the Summer”? So here it is. The scary thing: I could have gone geekier. But this is Crave, not Wizard, for crying out loud. We’re much cooler than that (points and laughs at all the geeks at Wizard…).

News.com Poll Geek-cred test
What was the summer’s most faithful comic book adaptation?

When Crave editors Leslie Katz and Erica Ogg asked me to mastermind the inaugural Crave Friday Poll™, my first reaction was, “Get the hell outta my office! I’m trying to sleep in here!!” After a visit from HR and a few tears–mostly on my part–I agreed to come up with something.

Aug
22

Broadband data collection bill clears Congress

“We cannot manage what we do not measure,” Inouye said. “This bill will give us the baseline statistics we need in order to eventually achieve the successful deployment of broadband access and services to all Americans.”

Internet service provider reports to the FCC would also have to be adjusted under the bill, so the FCC can identify the actual numbers of broadband connections by customer type and geographic area. The commission would also be required to identify tiers of broadband service in which most connections can transmit high-definition video, as well as collect demographic data for geographical areas not served by any advanced telecommunications provider. The bill also requires other government offices to collect information, such as whether Internet subscribers use dial-up or broadband.

The bill requires the commission to redefine broadband. In April, the commission voted to consider 768Kbps, which is the entry-level speed offered by major DSL providers like Verizon, the low end of “basic broadband,” a range that extends to under 1.5Mbps. For years, the commission had considered 200Kbps service to be “high speed.”

Passed unanimously in the Senate on Thursday, the Broadband Data Improvement Act now awaits the president’s signature. The legislation, introduced by Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, in 2007, calls for the Federal Communications Commission to collect a broader swath of information regarding who has broadband access.

The bill also establishes a grant program for organizations to track and promote Internet usage.

“With this legislation, the Senate has taken a crucial step toward a national broadband policy,” said Ben Scott, policy director of Free Press, a media reform organization. “The data collected would lay the foundation for policies in the next Congress to promote universal, affordable high-speed Internet access for all Americans.”

Providing universal broadband may very well start with simply finding out who has broadband access and who doesn’t. The House of Representatives on Monday passed a bill that could help answer that question by improving broadband data collection.

Aug
22

Linux to own 20 percent of the mobile market by 20

commentary

I believe we’ll see this most poignantly, and in the shortest period of time, in mobile. With the server world transitioning to the power and flexibility of Linux, it’s only a matter of time before developers extend that server to the mobile devices that yearn to connect with it. If the operating system serving both is communal property (e.g., Linux), all the better.

Linux solutions will be at the center of the drive to bring more content-rich environments to users who currently utilize mid-tier devices. More importantly, it looks increasingly likely that mobile Linux solutions will be an important building block in enabling an application domain that embraces Web-based applications and blended Web/native applications.

Having the server and the client OS powered by one vendor (Microsoft) is stultifying. Having it powered by a community is liberating.

Linux has been proclaiming the year of the desktop for years, to no avail. Meanwhile, quietly, insidiously, it has been taking a rising share of the mobile and embedded market. Indeed, ABI Research pegs Linux’s share of the mobile market at 20 percent by 2013. Such growth, in part driven by Google’s Android stamp of approval and Nokia’s Maemo approval, puts a serious crimp on Symbian’s and Microsoft’s ambitions in mobile.

Mobile Linux’s rise is partly a function of its superior cost proposition, but as ABI implies, it’s also partly due to its flexibility and the
iPhone’s introduction of web-based applications. As on the desktop, the more we move applications to the web, the less necessary it is that we have Windows waiting on the client to receive them.

Over dinner last night, Canonical CEO Mark Shuttleworth and I talked about the industry’s (and, indeed, society’s) tendency to self-regulate. Microsoft has had its decades of dominance, but at some point technology and those that build it have decided to throw off the manacles that bind us down to old ways of thinking about computing.

As ABI research notes,

Aug
22

Verizon offering speedy DSL to more customers

Verizon’s 7-megabits-per-second DSL service is now available to over 3 million of its customers, the company said Thursday.

The new service offers 7.1Mbps downloads and 768 kilobits per second uploads for $42.99 with a one-year contract that also includes local phone service. Verizon President Denny Strigl recently acknowledged during an interview at an investor conference that the company has been downplaying its DSL service in lieu of its fiber to the home service called Fios. But he said that going forward DSL will be emphasized much more.

“We certainly haven’t abandoned DSL,” he said.

The service, which was announced in January, was initially only available to about 400,000 homes, in roughly 400 communities. But the company has been upgrading service and ramping up speeds in parts of 20 states and the District of Columbia. Customers interested in getting the higher-speed service should check the Verizon Web site to see if the faster speed service is available in their area. In many places the fastest DSL speeds available are still only 3Mbps.

Aug
21

Nikon Coolpix S560 promises good feature-to-cost r

(Credit:
Nikon)

For $249.95 the Nikon Coolpix S560 offers 10 effective megapixels, a 5x Zoom-Nikkor lens, the company’s Optical Vibration Reduction (VR) Image Stabilization technology, and a bunch of features to make taking pictures easier and end results better. (Yeah, sorry, it’s kinda humdrum all the way around. On the other hand, that means it should be simple to use.)

The S560 has 15 scene modes to choose from, as well as the ability to let the camera automatically select the appropriate mode. These modes include a Smile Mode, which snaps a picture when the subject smiles; a Food Mode made for capturing close-ups of (you guessed it) food; and Portrait Mode, which couples a Smile Mode with a Blink Warning.

The back of the S560 houses a 2.7-inch LCD monitor with anti-reflection coating to help you see the redesigned shooting displays and icons in bright light. And, available across the Coolpix line–S560 included–you’ll get a helping of Nikon’s technology enhancements, like Face-Priority AF, In-Camera Red-Eye Fix, and D-Lighting, which compensates for excessive backlight or insufficient flash in images.

Look for the Coolpix S560 in September 2008, available in a choice of three colors: graphite black, cool blue, and cherry blossom.

Older posts «