Reasons why touch interfaces are terrible as tools for discovering new features, part 89

From Federico Viticci’s post 11 Tips for Working on the iPad: [Here’s…] a list of my favorite long-press shortcuts in Safari. 9: Tap and Hold in Safari Safari Reader (text icon on the left side of the address bar). Display settings to always use Safari Reader on the selected website or for all websites. Considering… Continue reading Reasons why touch interfaces are terrible as tools for discovering new features, part 89

Quiet!

So, it turns out that Peter Watts had less tolerance than I did for the plot holes in A Quiet Place: [Spoilers follow, especially if you click on that link to go to the original post.] I really wanted to like this one. I did, too, at first. The layered, multidimensional, never-quite-silence of the movie’s… Continue reading Quiet!

WALL-E, revisited

Seeing WALL-E BUT IN 7 DIFFERENT GENRES – especially the Jony Ive / Apple Keynote variant – serves as a reminder of the power of trailers (and clever editing) to sell us on a film, but mostly just makes me want to watch WALL-E again for the first time in a few years.[note]Was it really… Continue reading WALL-E, revisited

Hybrids

Digital Collage Artist Creates Weird and Wonderful Animal Hybrids From a sealion/horse creature named a Horseal to a Labrador puppy/albatross combo called a Labratross, Fredriksen renders his weird and wonderful critters by first finding two images that go well together. “The angle has to be right, and it helps a lot if the skin/fur textures… Continue reading Hybrids

Fribo

The idea behind Fribo seems to me to be much more palatable than the prospect of every household getting an internet-connected microphone that broadcasts details of everything within earshot to a central server: When a Fribo in your home hears a noise that it recognizes, it sends a message to another Fribo in your friend’s… Continue reading Fribo

TV catch-up: back soon

Apologies if posting falls away over the next few days. I find myself playing catch-up with a couple of TV programmes that are both due to return to our screens later this year and consequently my time for web browsing is a bit limited between, say, now and the weekend. The first show, courtesy of… Continue reading TV catch-up: back soon

Steven Bochco, R.I.P.

Steven Bochco, whose active years came just a bit too early for him to pick up the accolades he deserved for setting the stage for modern TV drama, has passed away. It’s easy to forget now just how different Hill Street Blues was when it first showed up on our screens: By conveying the sheer… Continue reading Steven Bochco, R.I.P.

Focus

From Bored Panda: Aluminum foil looks pretty boring. It is used for packaging, insulation, cooking… and making really shiny balls that appear to have no real purpose, apparently. That’s right, thanks to a Japanese jeweler, the whole country became obsessed with refining these metal leaves, and we aren’t sure how to react. Having lived through… Continue reading Focus