Like most of Jonathan Ive's work, the iPad is beautiful. Like most of Apple's work, it also makes me uneasy. I was planning to write about this feeling of unease, so imagine my delight when I discovered that Timothy B. Lee and others have already done the work for me. In "Why Geeks Hate the … Continue reading Education and the iPad’s Architecture of Control
Category: What I’m Looking At
Things I find and squirrel away.
If I title this wrong, it will diminish the beauty of the photo.
[via ffffound.]
Didn’t Want To Let Go
[HT: Neatorama]
Open Source on the Battlefield
In Iraq, Sergeant 1st Class Martin Stadtler had nothing. He was stationed near Mosul, at a base that covers 24 square kilometers. Surrounding the base was a wall, and at intervals along that wall stood watchtowers. Those towers were improvised; they were large concrete water pipes, stood on their ends. Inside each tower is a pair of soldiers. They're watching for insurgents. To communicate with the home base, they had standard-issue tactical radios. Unfortunately, these radios couldn't reach home base -- the base was too big. Soldiers had to play a game of Telephone to reach the base: one tower radios the next until they are finally in range of the home base. Obviously, this would not do.
Patents, Video, and an Open Internet
For a number of reasons, I'm fascinated by the fight over the <video> tag in HTML5 as related by Ryan Paul of Ars Technica – and not just because I like the idea of not having to install a plugin to watch video online. On the technical side, it's mind-boggling to think about the possible … Continue reading Patents, Video, and an Open Internet
walmart
He’ll Save Children, But Not the British Children
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbRom1Rz8OA Happy President's Day.



