Just Curious

Timeline Visualizations

August 4th, 2008  |  Published in design, links, productivity, visualization

For the longest time, I’ve wanted to keep a simple view of my day, one that includes planned and ad-hoc events. As a bonus, something I could share with my wife, family, and friends.

Enter Mixin, a web application that’s focused on tracking your time in a simple sharable manner. I can overlay my friend’s timeline and look for the gaps. Much easier that looking at a standard calendar view. You can send updates via email, IM, sms, or a Calendar app.

Beautiful!

mixin

The Story of Stuff

June 4th, 2008  |  Published in links, visualization

Story of Stuff

Story of Stuff is a infographic heavy video to help viewers understand the production and consumption patterns of the world.

Infographics Design Patterns

May 7th, 2008  |  Published in design, links, visualization

My new favorite reference site for infographic design patterns.

infodesignpatterns

Buy vs. Rent

May 7th, 2008  |  Published in finance, tools, visualization

While researching for home buying tips, I ran across several articles and calculators on the topic of buying a home versus renting. One of the better tools was provided by NY Times in their financial section.

Buy vs. Rent

The calculator allows you to enter in your current rent, potential price of a home, and various other factors that correlate to home ownership.

These tools seem fine and dandy, but they exclude some common reasons for buying a home such as space, greater control over your home, and location. Each of which is going to have a varying value to you. I can understand that if you’re moving from a 4 bedroom apartment to a 4 bedroom home you can compare apples to apples. If you’re moving out of a 2 bedroom apartment into a 4 bedroom home, does this calculation make sense? It’s more than likely it will take longer to reap the benefits of owning a home. Without this additional level of context, these tools simply confuse people on what home ownership means.

Xobni Completing Outlook: Day 1

May 5th, 2008  |  Published in links, productivity, software, tools  |  2 Comments

Email management is unfortunately become a necessity in the workforce and in personal life. It feels like these days you’re bombarded with information whether the information is relevant to you or just an FYI. A few years ago, I ended up adopting an Inbox Zero policy to help me manage my email and thus distractions from email.

While drinking my morning cup of coffee and reading the Sunday edition of NY Times, I read an brief article about Xobni, a company intent on improving your efficiency on Microsoft’s Outlook product. The premise of the product is to be able to search for email, and at the same time provide context to emails you’re viewing. I already leverage a desktop search engine called Copernic that has been working wonderfully for me, but I thought I’d give Xobni a try.

The gist of it is Xobni is a worthwhile product to incorporate in your everyday emailing. The company has focused on making frequent tasks easier and enabled you to understand your habits better by presenting you with analytical information. Xobni has created a way to make you efficient without interfering and locking you into their solution. After a day, I’ve already ditched my email search solution in favor of Xobni. I hope they continue their integration efforts with Outlook, and also look into tackling web-based solutions such as GMail, Yahoo Mail, and Hotmail.

Fairly simple to install, you download, you install, you say OK/ACCEPT a couple of times, and you’re done. Just as any search application needs to do, Xobni needs to scan your mailbox and compute analytics in order to enable searching and context based data. The indexing took about an hour.

Xobni transforms your Outlook interface by adding another sidebar. In this case, that’s a forth pane no bigger than the typical sidebar containing folder information.

panes.png
sidebar.png

All information is surfaced in this pane except for analytics information which is a window on its own. Xobni’s advantage is context, its able to present you with supplementary information that can be used for further action. As soon as you click on an email, you’re presented with information about the user the email is from, the network of people on the thread, recent conversations and file exchanges.

In regards to the user that sent the email, you have aggregate information on the volume of email you send and receive from this person as well as when the person usually sends emails. Understanding when a user responds is useful when you’re gauging when to follow-up with someone who hasn’t responded yet but don’t want to be annoying. A skill I wish everyone had. You can also call the person through Skype, email them, and most importantly coordinate meeting times. Scheduling meetings can be a nightmare at times, so Xobni makes it a one button action to get the conversation started. It scrapes your calendar and emails when you’re free. Simple enough, you can edit it with meetings you feel you could move, but it takes a frequent task that takes a few minutes and reduces it to a second.

Access to recent conversations helps you review emails between you and the persons emailing you. Again, the email is presented in the Xobni sidebar to remain unobtrusive while you work. Personally, my favorite aspect is when you select a recent conversation and you are presented with thread breakdown and the first few sentences of the email. Simple, but useful.

The Files Exchanged feature ties right back into the network context concept of Xobni, files that you have exchanged in a thread or between individuals are presented for quick access. Another common operation.

Xobni separates itself from the likes of the other mail search tools by providing more contextual data as well as analytical information. Once indexing of my mailbox was completed, I was able to see summary information on the current day’s activities. Kind of boring, but helpful to identify those days when you’re being bombarded with emails.

today.png
Another favorite feature of mine, is the “Follow Up” Delay summary. It breaks down the delay in your response time for emails you receive. My personal rule is to respond within a day even if its just to acknowledge the email. This allows the person that emailed me to understand when I may be able to get back to them, and gives them a chance to focus on something else. At times I’ve personally experienced an over-sense of urgency via email because a response was never sent.
followup.png



With these summary charts, Xobni enables its users to be more self-aware.

search.png

Lastly is Xobni’s search feature. It’s simple, it’s fast, and it works. It’s inline with Outlook so I don’t need to go to a separate application to search anymore. I shouldn’t have to say anymore about search, if I do, its probably too complex.

AT&T Free Wi-Fi

May 4th, 2008  |  Published in apple, gadget, links, technology

From Gizmodo:

AT&T’s free Starbucks Wi-Fi for iPhone usersdeal didn’t last very long. Users on the MacRumors forum say that locations where Wi-Fi worked just days ago now have the free iPhone access removed.

I was looking forward to being able to roam around for free to compliment my Starbucks addiction.

Innovation at Google

April 30th, 2008  |  Published in manage, technology

Business Week is running an article titled How Google Fuels Its Idea Factory which is an interview with CEO Eric Schmidt in regards to how Google fosters new ideas. The best question and answer in the interview is the simplest one:

Can innovation really be managed, or is it a case where you have to keep the company and its managers out of the way?

I disagree with the word “managed.” You have to have a set of necessary conditions for innovation to occur. To start with, you have to listen to people.

We all don’t work in an environment where employees get to spend 20% of their time on projects they came up with to benefit the company. It’s a program than likely requires be instilled from top to bottom. That being said, the most important part is listening. Even without the 20% time for R&D related activity, people with passion find a way, so as a manager you should encourage and listen. The idea won’t always be great, you may not be able to get buy in to execute on it, but the point is to try.

Write It Down

April 23rd, 2008  |  Published in manage, productivity

In a notebook, email, text file, whatever, during the day, write down:
* What you did.
* What you need to do.
* What you don’t know.

You’ll be amazed what you learn about yourself.

Google App Engine

April 8th, 2008  |  Published in python, software, technology, tools

Google just announced a web application infrastructure called Google App Engine. Unlike Amazon’s offerings of a la carte services, Google provides a sandbox to host your application using a Python runtime environment. In addition to the Python runtime, Google App Engine provides access to a data persistence layer, Google’s account management system, and mail.

The runtime environment includes Django, a popular web application framework designed to get your web application off the ground quickly. Google used it as a base and integrated it into their services. All of your application must be written in Python, so it seems like you will not be able to optimize of enhance functionality via C.

The main advantage here is leveraging Google’s scalability and reliability. There are few companies out their that manage their operations as well as Google and now they are offering a way for developers to take advantage of that. Anyone that has developed a server based application understands the hassle of deployment and management of your servers.

Googles win is additional usage of their services and as well as an injection of user data that Google can mine and use for their advertising.

Overall this is a great offering for Google. Not quite sure yet its for long term, large scale applications just yet, but its certainly great for getting an web application off the ground. If you’re a desktop developer in need of a web component, GAE seems like a great fit.

More on this as soon as my application gets approved.

From Big Screen to Little Screen

March 25th, 2008  |  Published in technology, tv

A recent failure in the cooling system of my television has rendered it dead. While I’m waiting for it be repaired, I’ve had to get my fix from online video streaming sites. At first I was skeptical because of the past attempts and poor interfaces, such as ads running concurrently as well as lack of full episodes.

Over the past week, I’ve used a few ad driven sites; hulu.com, abc.com, and cbs.com. Hulu.com and CBS.com offer the best experience from my perspective.

Picture 2.png

Hulu.com has the cleanest overall interface. It offers both TV episodes and movies. Both in clip form and full length. You click and it starts playing. You do have to watch commercials, each ranging about 15 to 30 seconds. You have to watch about two minutes worth for a 30 minute episode.

Hulu’s player is slick, you have your typical play/pause/forward/rewind options, but you also have the option to go fullscreen. Something else they introduce is to dim the lights, which will grey out the rest of the screen. That’s a nice little feature to focus on the video.

Streaming started almost immediately and required no installation since Hulu is making use of Flash. The quality was great as well. I did notice some pixellation when I switched to full screen, but that may have been my connection speed at the time.

With shows just coming back, it was difficult to judge how up to date the content was. It does appear as if content is being added on a daily basis, some of it syndicated shows.

Picture 3.png

I did manage to find up to date episodes as well as HD quality on ABC’s site. I’m not convinced it’s 1080i as I would expect from my cable provider, but more like 480p. ABC also decided to package the Flash application into a custom wrapper, so I had to grant permission to ABC to install this application in order to play. That’s definitely a knock against ABC.

Once installed, I had to wait 30 seconds for the player to load up two carousels, one related to ABC shows available for viewing and another smaller one related to clips from the episode I was watching. The former was pointless, I’ve already selected the show I wanted to watch.

Once episode played, the quality was good, the streamed content was delivered without any delays. I watched about three minutes of commercials, which is not bad at all. Each one after a 8 to 10 minute block. The only annoying part of commercials was that when thirty seconds were up, I had to click a button to continue watching my episode. The reason behind this is that the commercials were not necessarily 30 seconds long, its just was ABC set as the minimum viewing time. Hulu on the other hand seems to have reformatted to integrate seamlessly.

Picture 1.png

CBS’s take was similar to Hulu, get users to the content and make it easy to play. Again, no custom Flash installation, full screen good quality video and about two minutes of commercial. Like Hulu, CBS delivered content almost immediately. None of them really offer an innovation of viewing experience, but they do translate the experience of my DVR and TV screen to my browser screen.

Ranking the options, Hulu is first, CBS second, and ABC third. What’s great though is that they are all viable options for watching episodes. I’m not yet convinced that I can cancel my cable subscription, but its no longer a never, its just a not yet.


You are viewing a mobilized version of this site...
View original page here

Mobilized by Mowser Mowser