Tuesday, June 25, 2013

visualising cyber attacks

This is a quite a cool visualization of real time data of a cyber attack.

I did have a PHD student working on this (he gave up), but was quite excited about looking at the design and usability of such systems.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Lancaster university

Just visiting Lancaster university for a day. Definitely top of my list of universities with a good view. I am just finishing lunch of a very nice risotto ( some how Lancaster and quality risotto seem some how juxtaposed ) and freshly brewed coffee.

Just had the complete tour of all the screens which I hope to use in large scale study. I am quite excited by it all .




Wednesday, June 19, 2013

CHI 2013 BBC interview


The interview I did about the Music room at CHI2013 is now online

[here

Wow I talk fast... 

Monday, June 17, 2013

When is flat design not flat design ?

When is flat design not flat design ? This video form the BBC ( well from Apple) shows the new parallax effect. 
 The two things which caught my attention one was that the accelerometer is used to generate a parallax effect. this is the first time to my knowledge that true 3D has been used in a graphic user interface. 
The other slightly more subtle aspect is that colours are tweaked according to the ambient brightness. My big worry with the flat design and the very thin Helvetica font is that in many use cases the thin font would be invisible. What I find intensely interesting is that graphic designers are now using the context of the picture to keep the readability of the graphic constant. Generally graphic design has always looked at everything in a highly static pictorial manner, for me this is the first time that a mainstream graphic design product has really taken on context and animation in a powerful way. It could change graphic design for ever.

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I know that android has had parallax effects before now but this is the first time it has gone truly mainstream.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Masters project of the day - Trust

There has been some anecdotal evidence about how often people will trust a website which has spelling errors upon it. 

Previous work by 

Everard, Andrea, and Dennis F. Galletta. "How presentation flaws affect perceived site quality, trust, and intention to purchase from an online store." Journal of Management Information Systems 22.3 (2006): 56-95.

Has shown that people don't trust websites which have error but the research has not explored people's personal relationship.



There are two aspects I would explore 


  1. How much would you trust someone who makes spelling errors in email or facebook or dating site.
  2. How much would you trust someone who make numeric erroro in an communication 
  3. How much would you trust someone who made graphic errors.
should be quite simple to do - show two emails or profiles by two diffrent people one with errors and the other with non and ask people to rate 
(or work by preference - choose A or B) 

Measures check social desirability (Rotter 1967).
Balanced Inventory of Desirable Responding (BIDR) developed by Paulhus (1991)
Measuring Trust:
Experiments and Surveys in Contrast and Combination Michael Naef Jürgen Schupp - has general trust measure. 



Google warts and all.


Google glasses - 

Here is me trying on google glasses.  Was I impressed? well its not a walk up and use interface. Its voice and picture you have to learn it. Overall I wasn't impressed, but you don't buy a computer for it's hardware you buy it for the unique apps that can run on it. Unfortunarlty the only app which I would have found useful would have been the face recognition apps ( app which reminds you of the name of the person you talking too- I'm so rubbish at it) has just been banned as an invasion of privicy.

I wasn't impressed by the screen - its a tiny command line. Generally my opinion is that people use their face as a communications medium and expect a huge pay back for anything which inteupts this bandwidth. So I won't be buying and Google shares soon but I might short them. 

Still I like big bold interface advances and I'm willing to sit on my hands thinking, until people have had time to develop some good apps.

Architecture 

More importantly was the architecture of Google HQ. The bright primary corporate colours were resued through out the building,
(bikes, chairs, plates). Unfortunately this had the effect of making the place look like a huge children's playground. 
I quite like the 'playful' nature but I was told I wasn't insured to use the bike or the unused slide behind. The provision of 
services and the general paternal nannying made me feel like they were infantilizing the work force.  


Google and neruodiversity 

Every evening I saw huge numbers of kids (I'm doing it now, young college graduates)  get on a bus to down town 
San Fransico where they live. I liked the fact they got a bus rather than adding to the huge pollution and congestion of silicon valled
I watched the ultra smart, ultra numerate, ultra ordered, ultra meticulus,   ultra perfectionist,  boys and girls many of whom got their clothes washed by the company, 
getting on the coaches together and thought  'there is another autism cluster in the making'. 


The Pervasive display conference 2013 

It's been a hard tip and I have a lot of budget travelling to go,  but its been worth it. I managed to make a link up with the people at Lancaster and I can finish the work on recasting space syntax for pervasive displays. 
It's also at a polar point to CHI - small, with enough overlap in language and thinking that people can really talk about stuff.  If the research works out I would like to atend next year. 

Startup Embassy Silicon Valley.




Silicon Valley the high-tech start up capital of the world - but it doesn't look any different from any other US suburb. Its the people who make Silicon Valley and if you really want to 'stay in Silicon Valley' you have to meet the dreamers who drive it. 
No one understands the needs of a startup like Jordi. There are other incubators around the world but here you get more than a bunk, a desk and a fire hose of bandwidth. Here you get to meet other mostly young male entrepreneurs, you get to talk to people who have a vision and a desire to change the world. I found the young slightly geeky super intelligent , cosmopoliton crowd that live there a stimulating and welcoming. 
I love Jordi's overall vision of a place you can stay for extended periods while people get stuff built and mostly learn more about the whole startup process it self. I could only stop for two days but if I had to do a startup I would move base there for a few months. You can't study and MBA on how to be an entrepreneur, but you can live it and you can live it  at the Startup Embassy. I only had a couple of days there but immediately pick up on the friendly relaxed slightly college dormy feel. I had some fascinating conversations with the other guests on everything from Bitcoins to private space ventures. 

I can't imagine a better way to stay in Silicon valley the real Silicon valley. 

ps my bed top one on the right. 

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

digital Potter Owl


I was wondering if it was possible to design a helicopter drone that had basic spatial awareness ( simple distance to other objects ) with a range of a couple of miles. 

The idea would be to create a micro courier - a device which you could use to send small items ( parcels, packets)  from one location to another. Useful for super fast post ? This is kind of a digital Potter Owl. 



Live from pervasive displays

Checking out google glasses at google hq.

The screen read - I cannot talk to google !