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Latest posts by Guy Carberry..

Nokia E72 – Optical Navi Key success!

For what it’s worth, here are a few notes and ramblings about my experience with Nokia’s new flagship business phone, the Nokia E72.

Nokia E72

The Nokia E72

I’ve been looking for a new mobile phone for some time now. Something to replace my constant companion of the last two years, the Nokia E51.

Nokia E51

(well used) Nokia E51

It was always going to take something special to trump that phone for me. You might not even have heard of the E51. It came with little of the fanfare accompanying the more high-profile devices of the last few years. Even within the “business-sector” Nokia E-Series, the likes of the qwerty form factor brethren E63 and E71 stole the thunder from the traditional styled candy-bar E51. And those in turn hardly shouted their arrival like their “cool” cousins from the multimedia N-Series stable. And that’d before we even consider heavily marketed iPhone and slurry of touch-screen devices that followed.

Yet, whilst understated, the E51 ticked all my “must-have” boxes and quite a few nice-to-haves too. My top-five requirements for a mobile phone are simple:

Reliable phone call reception Quality ergonomics and input device (but not a brick!) WIFI and bluetooth connectivity Exceptional battery life Quality personal information management

My E51 was in constant use from February 2007 until my latest purchase, the Nokia E72 which I managed to buy from Expansys for a rather reasonable £330. What follows is my reasoning for purchase as well as a comparison with some other phones I had a play (Nokia E61i, E71, E55, iPhone) with before taking the plunge away from my trusty E51.

Nokia e61i, e72, e51, e75

A few of the E-Series family (l-r E61i, E72, E51, E75)

The E51 was nice and small. Small enough to fit into any pocket. The E72 is a touch wider to accommodate the QWERTY keyboard. There’s not a lot in it though. Whilst the E61i feels really wide the E72 feels nicely in proportion. It’s similar in dimensions to the iPhone but feels a lot smaller. It’s also pretty much the same size as the E71 which I’m not really going to touch on any more as plenty of other reviews have already covered the similarities and differences between the two devices.

Despite the small size of the phone it manages to cram a qwerty keypad of four rows, 10 buttons wide. On first glance you’d be forgiven for wondering how you’d manage to type on such a thing but this fear immediately subsides when you start to compose your first message. The buttons are shaped in such a way that prevents miss-typing. They have a comfortable rubbery but sturdy feel to them and I’m already far quicker at typing on the device than I ever was on the E51. Incidentally the E51 had a pretty poor ability to remember words you saved into the T9 dictionary. Must have had a very small capacity for “own-words”. Obviously the E72 has no need for a T9 – one of the benefits of the qwerty keypad.

Nokia e72 keyboard

E72 keyboard

Nokia e61i -vs- Nokia e72 keypad buttons

E61i -vs- E72 keyboards

You can see that the E61i has a reasonable breathing space between each key whilst the E72 has hardly any. However I do find it easier to type on the newer E72. The keys are bevelled in such a way that it makes for precise key strokes. The E61i by comparison was to wide in the palm of the hand to make typing comfortable.

IMG_0985

E75 keyboard orgy

The E75 has two keyboards. But neither seem up to the task of a comfortable typing experience. The numeric keypad on the front contains tiny little buttons that are easily mis-keyed and the slide-out keypad is just too wide and the top row of buttons are uncomfortable to use due to the ledge created by the front panel. The particular phone feels like it’s trying too hard to please too many people. Reminds me of the Homer Simpson car.

Nokia e72s -vs- e61i (size difference)

E61i -vs- E72

The E72 is considerably narrower than the E61i which makes for a much more ergonomic fit in the palm of the hand.

There have been a few complaints in other reviews and on the Nokia forums about light leaking from between the buttons on the phone. Whilst there certainly is “light-leak” it’s not something that I immediately noticed nor something that particularly bothers me. I’m fairly sure most of the phones I’ve ever owned have been unable to keep the lighting from escaping from behind the keys. My old Sony Ericsson K750i was a particular offender and that particular unit did bother me but the E72 is bearable.

Talking about lighting, the E72 has a torch! That was something I really liked with my Sony Ericsson K750i and W800i. The LED that is usually used for lighting photos can be turned on by holding down the space-bar for a few seconds. I use it frequently when my young son is crying for his dummy in the middle of the night!

The one-touch keys are just as ergonomically polished as the keypad. One failing of the E51 and the E71 was the arrangement of the home, calendar, contacts and message key. They were very crammed together. Not so on the E72. There’s plenty of space between the buttons and this spacing along with the attention to detail on shape of the buttons make them really easy to use. The call start and end buttons, whilst not green and red, do carry the usual symbols and I cant say I missed the lack of colour in this respect.

The directional pad, which pulses when the phone is on stand-by, has a nice action and is unlikely to suffer the same fate as the directional keys on my E51.

E72 optical DPAD

The E72 directional pad is unlikely to crumble away

Nokia e51 wear and tear

worn E51 directional pad

The directional pad also doubles up as an optical navi-key which to a while to get to grips with but I had a moment of clarity and now wouldn’t turn it off. You run your thumb over the middle part of the directional pad in the direction you’d like to scroll, much like a touch screen. I do see the advantage of using it for browsing web pages but for some actions I prefer the accuracy of the directional pad in much the same way as I prefer the digital pad to the analogue controls on the Playstation joypad. I’m glad Nokia made this an optional feature as it’s a bit of a controversial change for those used to the old way of doing things.

I opted for the Zodium black flavour. It’s also available in Silver and Gold. However, the optical factor means the centre button must be black rather than a silver or gold colour which would have suited the respective colour scheme much better. Regardless of this factor I would have gone for the black version as it looks really sturdy and the other two look a bit plasticky. I’m sure they’re not though and are built of the same rock-solid metal materials.

The E55 on the other hand feels cheap and compromised and more than a little like an N-SERIES phone. It feels like a design-by-committee phone.

There’s very little plastic on the external surfaces of the E72. The metallic construction makes it feel like it could outlast the E55 and definitely the E51 who’s volume buttons have now completely crumbled away!

Nokia e51 wear and tear

e51 volume buttons have completely perished

Nokia E72

E72 volume buttons are made of more substantial stuff

There have been concerns about the loose fitting of the back-panel of the E72. Having read a few reviews before purchase I was eager to see if this was the case with my E72. I put the battery into the phone and then the rather thing but solid backplate. Sure enough it seemed a bit loose at the bottom right edge. I chose to ignore the fact and set the thing charging up. Weirdly, having charged the phone the back-plate was no longer loose. Was it all psychological, did the battery expand or is it just a very subtle issue? To me it isn’t an issue and the phone feels sturdy in my grip.

The screen resolution has also come in for some criticism but it looks crisp and clear to me. If more pixels means less battery life then I’ll take the lower resolution thanks.

The S60 operating system remains confusing and unintuitive. The E75 and E72 both put the settings in a new folder called “control panel”. But you wont find all the settings there. So working out how to get things working to your liking requires the usual S60 brain-ache.

Contacts, Calendar, Texting and Audio player are as expected from s60: functional but mildly irritating in execution. Whilst Nokia make amazing hardware, the user-experience could use a serious overhaul. But it’s not a significant enough issue to push me toward the iPhone or Android offerings just yet.

The main issues I noted were that Switch (to migrate from one Nokia to another) didnt work. Exchange server is hard impossible to setup. Gizmo (whatever that is) is invasive — prompting you to set it up whenever you do a WLAN scan.

Good points: the chat client for use with Google Talk, Microsoft Messenger and the like works exceptionally well. As does the Nokia email client. Had Gmail up and running in a sudo-push email manner in a matter of minutes.

The bundled YouTube client is fantastic and well geared to the device.

Maps and GPS is work better when using Google Maps as opposed to the Nokia Maps client (which has trouble locking on to satellites oddly).

Syncing with Google Calendar is impossible and rather irritating but I’ll live with it.

The help files supplied on the phone are very basic and dont cover even a tenth of what the phone can do. It’s fairly using the search facility with the help as it can only match exact terms. So you need to know what things are called to find a result.

Installing new software applications ought to be easy and it is as long as you can deal with the certificate issues. Basically the phone will prevent you installing anything out of the box and you need to change the certificate settings. You’ll have to hunt to find out where those particular settings are located.

The camera isn’t bad. An upgrade from the 3.2MP unit in the E75.

IMG_0968

e75 camera

Nokia E72

E72 camera

I cant see that 5MP is really a general improvement but it is perhaps a cheaper option for Nokia than improving the software so the camera is a bit more speedy at taking snaps. It takes photos of inanimate, stationary objects no problem but don’t expect it to be fast enough to get a halfway decent shot of the kids!

There’s also a video camera on the front for video calls. Not something I ever do so cant really comment about that. I’m sure that people who like to see who they’re talking to will appreciate the feature.

The gallery is reasonable enough. It’s like the one you find on N-SERIES devices with a picture carousel spinning through most recent to oldest photos.

The video gallery is a huge improvement on my old E51. On that I didn’t even get a still from the clip to determine if I was about to load the right video or not so I was pleasantly surprised by the E72.

The standard headphone jack is a welcome addition. I never bothered with the headphones provided with the E51. The E72’s standard size headphone slot means I don’t have to. Spotify and iPlayer work perfectly and I hook the phone up to various docks around the house and in my car now.

Nokia e72 3.5mm headphone jack

E72 headphone jack

Nokia e72 running BBC iPlayer

E72 running BBC iPlayer

Battery life is amazing and USB charging is a definite bonus. I get around five days between charges with moderate usage. This is way better than my E51. I’d be interested to see how the battery performs in two years time. Fortunately spares are relatively inexpensive.

One peculiarity with the package was that the manual was in Finnish! But I did get a PDF printout of an English version included. A bit shoddy on Nokia’s part but no big deal.

The provided carry case is very useful but I bought a silicon skin so I could stick it on various surfaces around the house and have the buttons at easy lens. The Silicone skin also protects the protruding camera lens somewhat. The leather case that comes with the phone is great at protecting the screens and keys though.

It took me a while to discover how to manually activate the key lock. It’s completely different to the standard numeric keypad method. But onc you know it’s easy to remember: the left select button followed by the right select button under the screen.

In conclusion, the E72 will definitely last me at least the next couple of years. The build quality is fantastic. Ergonomics are about as good as you’ll get in a device this small with a full qwerty keyboard. The battery life is second to none and the wealth of supported mainstream apps make is a decent competitor to the iphone and android clan. S60 continues to be the achilles heel and if you’re after amazing software usability you’ll be disappointed. I’ve been using Nokias and S60 a few years now so am used to the foibles but I’d be keen to see how people used to more user friendly devices would cope. The optical nav-key was the biggest surprise for me. I didn’t expect to get on with it at all. But I love it!

Nokia e72 ergonomic keyboard

Nokia E72

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Published on January 7, 2010

Filed in Life

A practical guide to designing for the web (Book review)

Mark Boulton’s Five Simple Steps: A practical guide to designing for the web has to be my favourite web design book of the year. One of the many things I really love about it is the personalised anecdotal style applied throughout. It’s the kind of book that will age gracefully as it doesn’t dwell too much on current trends or techniques, supplementing them with solid age-old design theory from someone who has had formal training in typography, layout and colour theory.

Mark illustrates each of his points with a case study from his own vast portfolio and other examples from the web and print. Be it the enormous task of redesigning the Drupal community or the De Standard newspaper websites to the time he spent designing endless tables of printed data in his early career. The book has bags of personality and really does fill a void in my bookcase that has been begging to be filled for some years.

Mark self-published his book and the attention to detail cross the entire process shines through. The enclosed postcards show us that this is the first in a series of five simple steps books and the handwritten compliment slip really added to the whole experience. Even the box it was delivered in showed that ever ounce of the design had been poured over for unending hours. I can wholeheartedly recommend it.


Buy Five Simple Steps, A practical guide to designing for the web
direct from Mark Boulton Design LTD for £29 or get the PDF for £12.

Designing for the web (book)

Designing for the web (book)

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Published on May 20, 2009

Tags: book, Review, webdesign

Filed in Work

Milton Keynes Tyre and Brake (MKT & B Centre)

If you live in Bletchley, Milton Keynes or anywhere nearby and you’re looking for a good, honest, family-run garage to get your car serviced then I suggest look look no further than Milton Keynes Tyre and Brake (MKT&B).

Every single time I’ve used the garage to get work done they’ve ended up charging me less than I was quoted! They’re friendly, welcoming and always happy to help.

It’s not often that I’m compelled to endorse a company but I bought a new car recently and had a bit of work done under warranty by the main dealer. The way that particular franchise treated my car really underlined why I’ve been using MKT&B for so many years now. Despite the timely phone calls for servicing from the main dealer I shall be sticking with Milton Keynes Tyre and Brake for the foreseeable. So often we moan about poor service that I thought I’d readdress the balance here.

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Published on May 20, 2009

Tags: car, Consumer, service

Filed in Life

edweb09 facilitated by Headscape

The edweb09 workshop was held over two days, 14-15th May 2009 and was facilitated by Headscape, a web development company based in Hampshire, UK. The workshop was aimed at those web managers working in the UK higher education sector and covered four distinct topics: usability, accessibility, content management systems and writing for the web. I was lucky enough to be invited to attend.

The workshop was a first for Headscape who are better known for the Boagworld web design podcast. Paul Boag is a well known speaker in the user-centred web design field. As well as hosting Boagworld he also regularly presents at conferences world-wide. I had last seen him speak at @media 2008 and was pretty familiar with his style of delivery. Chris Scott , Headscape’s MD also presented a session at the start of the second day bringing a little bit of variety to proceedings. All the while 80s pop-star and Paul’s podcast sidekick, Marcus Lillingtonwas taking copious notes.

This was not the type of workshop where attendees are encouraged to partake in group activities involving flipchart paper, marker pens and stickies. Paul and his colleague Chris to delivered four presentations whereby delegates were invited to comment from our own perspective along the way.

Day one began with lunch and then two workshop sessions. Then we went back to the hotel, had a few drinks, a very tasty meal and ample opportunity for networking. The second day started early with the concluding two workshop sessions before ending with lunch and then home. So, effectively just one day of workshop spread over two days. I’d not encountered this format before but I think it really worked quite well.

I found it really useful to get a perspective on how traditional universities were dealing with the same issues that offer daily challenges to the distance learning institution, The Open University, where I work. Other delegates were from Bath, Keele, Strathclyde, Oxford, Exeter, Aberdeen, Edge Hill and City university. Some of these people were Headscape clients and others, including myself, were not.

Most useful to me was the first session on becoming a user-centred institution. Although we undertake usability testing and focus groups as a matter of course, there is still a lot more we could be doing at the Open University to ensure a consistent and meaningful user experience. Paul offered a few techniques that I’d not really considered before such as opposing traits and flash tests. He also offered some useful advice on constructing a good usability report.

The other sessions were also very interesting. I discovered that many academic institutions are opting for the Terminal Four content management system. I’d never even heard of it! I liked the web writing session, especially the idea that an institution should have it’s own personality and it should be possible to create a ‘persona’ for the university. We have brand guidelines but nothing as specific as doing that. I wonder if it would even be achievable across the plethora of sites and services across the Open University. I think the Headscape team were quite taken aback when they discovered the breadth and depth or web-based services within our institution. Particularly poignant was the issue of disability. The Open University has upward of 10,000 students who admit to a disability. We simply cant pay lip-service to accessibility. Because a great deal of our offering is online and our large number of students it cant be a case of fixing things to be accessible as and when students complain about them!

It was great to have the opportunity to discuss common problems and issues during lunch and other breaks. Headscape scheduled the workshop to break over two days with an overnight stay at a rather swanky hotel in Romsey. Headscape HQ is located in a tasteful barn conversion deep in rural Hampshire, a nice change from the bustle of a big city.

I do think that they went over and above the call of duty by providing a taxi service from Southampton airport to the venue. Also the hotel wasn’t the usual Travelodge fair either. People working in Universities are not accustomed to staying in what amounted to a rather swish boutique hotel with a nouveau cuisine three course meal. Workshop, meals, hotel and taxi for an inclusive cost of less that £300. All of which gave the impression that Headscape, despite this being their first workshop, were something special. Paul, Marcus and Chris are three very likeable chaps who I’m hoping we’ll get the opportunity to collaborate with in the near future.

For those who attended the workshop, I mentioned that the Open University was involved in a range of interesting social networking activity at the moment. Here are the links to the things I mentioned:

Platform Open University on Facebook, YouTube, iTunes and Twitter Open University staff on Twitter SocialLearn — just hype right now but I’m promised that it will do something later in the year. They also have a SocialLearn blog. A few notable and relevant OU bloggers: Tony Hirst, Stuart Brown, Liam Green-Hughes, Laura Dewis, Martin Weller Knowledge Network Cloudworks (about to get a design overhaul)

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Published on May 20, 2009

Tags: education, edweb09, headscape, networking, training, workshop

Filed in Work

What’s so great about Second Life?

I paid a visit to SecondLife a couple of years ago to find out what all the buzz was about. It was a bit like the Sims meets Grand Theft Auto but with no missions to do. After a while I felt it was a bit of a glorified chat room albeit one where you could actually laugh-out-load or roll around on the floor laughing rather than write the instant message equivalent. It didn’t really grip me at the time. Then I found out the the Open University was getting seriously involved in the “game?” and I decided to pay it another visit.

I met up with a couple of Second Life residents — Magus Burton (MB) and Zandra Fraisse (ZF) to find out more.

How did you discover Second Life?

MB: Some years ago I stumbled across an intriguing article in a Sunday supplement about an online gaming phenomenom by the name of Second Life. Although in (voluntary) incarceration at the time, I vowed to remember the name and investigate it further upon my release.

ZF: My son was looking in Popular Science Magazine and decided to get me a gift certificate for SL. He thought it would amuse me .

How long have you been using Second Life?

MB: Almost as soon as I returned home I logged on to SL to see what it was all about, so I have been ‘playing’ for maybe three years now.

ZF: Approx. 2 1/2 years

How many hours a week on average do you spend in Second Life?

MB: To be honest it really varies upon what projects I am involved with, the status of my friends, aqquaintances and business partners. I do a lot of artistic support for people and make textures, skins, eyes, clothing, furniture and buildings, so some weeks I will spend upwards of 30 hours and others I will spend maybe 2 or 3.

ZF: Approx. 25 hrs. a week, some less some more…depends on how much I have to do there or in real life.

What attracted you to it?

MB: have been fascinated by virtual reality and synthetic realities ever since I first saw Disneys Tron (1983) and the possibilities within SL seemed a perfect outlet for my creativity and thirst for knowledge.

ZF: Everything- the creativity, the people, the opportunity to meet people from all areas of the globe….

How does Second Life compare to things like text forums and instant message systems?

MB: I personally prefer the perceived ‘interactivity’ granted by SL, with a traditional messenger such as MSN you can be limited by text only and emoticons, therefore a lot of feeling can be lost in the substandard communication (over 95% of human communication is non-verbal). In SL we can more easily use poses and animations to express ourselves, for instance, if a friend is feeling down I can ‘physically’ give that person a hug etc. It does make a good deal of difference all though it is only 1 step up from an emoticon.

ZF: In some ways its the same but with avi’s to act out what ur trying to xpress in chat.

What or who helped you understand how to operate in Second Life?

MB: I taught myself most of what I know, but by its very communal nature the residents tend to be willing to help each other if asked politely and granted patience. I have a solid core group of close friends, people who I met ‘inworld’ who I now communicate with by phone, text, email etc. We all look out for each other although we exist in different timezones, countries and states. We all look after each other and provide for one another, even offer emotional support in times of difficulty.

ZF: In the very beginning it was trial and error until I met Magus Burton and Tanya Matahari, they both had a great deal of patience and kindness…without them I probably wouldn’t have stayed in SL as long as I have.

Is there any special jargon or terminology that newbies to Second Life could do with understanding?

MB: There are many differnt ‘inworld’ terms, and of course abbreviations just like with any other messenger. SL however as a far more comprehensive lexicon than most. This is due to the nature of the ‘game’. With any new idea, new terminology is necessary in order to describe it efficiently and effectively.

ZF: The terms SL for Second Life, RL for Real life , Ruthed meaning ur avi is all screwed up at its beginning appearance stage- the rest…I guess they will have to come and find out.

What do you most enjoy doing whilst in Second Life?

MB: I generally enjoy chatting with my friends and creating new things, I like to challenge myself and see how the world around me evolves.

ZF: Besides talking and sharing with my friends, I would have to say creating various things out of mere prims (primitives- basic shapes)

Have you spent any money in Second Life? How much?

MB: I have spent countless linden dollars (SLs currency) but that is not affected by my real life investment. The most I have ever paid in real life cash is only around £5, everything else is money I made ‘inworld’.

Have you made any money in Second Life? How much?

MB: Again I couldn’t quantify the ammount I have made in SL. But to give you an Idea, at the peak of my productivity, myself and my business partner had 8 shops, a club, a mall various houses and building estates. I ceased involvement in in our company last year and gave away my designs. I found SL had stopped being enjoyable and had become a labour so I went back to the nature of exploring and having fun.

ZF: I’ve spent alot of money,I have no idea, BUT I have made money as well….so to me, it all evens out for the pleasure that SL and my friends there have given me.

What have you created in Second Life?

MB: I have created numerous lines of fashion (somewhere in the region of 2000 odd garments), many vehicles, artworks, sculptures, furnishings,eyes, jewelery, skins scripts (to run animations etc.) and buildings.

ZF: Too many things to list but in general, clothes , furniture, music boxes, snow globes, motorcycles, cars, seasonal displays…so many things I can’t remember.

What’s involved in making a really great avatar?

MB: The key to a great avi, in my opinion is to customize and create as much as possible. I start with a decent shape, modify the features and the height and weight etc, next I use photoshop to make some nice eyes and upload them when satisfied. I then make a new skin, again using photoshop and upload that. Then either make or buy some clothes and finally buy some appropriate hair (if the avi is to have hair). Until recently I had never worn any clothing that I hadn’t made for myself.

ZF: Aside from the usual avi parts, skin, shape, hair, so on and so forth..I believe Heart….No matter what, ur RL personality shows up in ur avi eventually, so my advice is, follow ur heart when making ur avi, u can’t go wrong then.

Where are some good places to visit to get a feel for things? Why?

MB: There are plenty of good places to visit, I like a lot of the clubs but it really depends on your agenda. My advice to people is to get chatting and meeting people, they will often tell you about or teleport you to places that you never would have thought to search for.

ZF: There is something to be learned anywhere u go in SL…something learned about urself, about people, about SL in general, and all are willing to help a newbie…We were all newbies at one time or another, so we understand and know what newbies are going thru.

Are there any gaming elements to Second Life?

MB: There are many, there are of course the role play sims for people who like that-they range from fantasy to war games and everything inbetween. There are also a wide variety of contests and competitions to take part in and of course little interactive games like Pool, skating and even motor racing. I have even been fishing and skydiving.

ZF: I suppose if ur into roleplay there are so called gaming elements…but for me, I’m very competitive, in a nice way, so when one of my fashion designer friends asked for something for their treasure hunt or fashion show, I like to push my creativity to the limits and make them something fabulous, or at least I try for fabulosity.

What’s been your best experience in Second Life?

MB: Sounds sentimental but my best experience has been meeting the people who I am now so very close to. The kindness, openess and generosity of like-minded individuals is a real pleasure to experience.

ZF: Besides meeting ALL my SL friends….I would have to say meeting my soulmate here….and finding out there really is someone perfect for everyone somewhere

..and your worst experience?

MB: Probably losing my job as club host at Sphynx after a griefing attack (when people enter sims and wreak havoc upon any residents there) that was beyond my control and most certainly not my fault. Also the people who fail to differentiate between SL and real life can really make life miserable for others.

ZF: *Laughs* Finding out my soulmate was married but its all good, at least, we can be friends.

What do you think are the biggest opportunities for Second Life in the future?

MB: The opportunities really are endless, SL has a huge community (enough to make its currency have value within the real world), has made millionaires of people, has married people andcontinues to support users who need the help or support of those who think and act alike. It can progress in any way it chooses so long as Linden Labs listens to the views of residents.

ZF: In the future as well as now….I feel SL offers the opportunity for people who are handicapped to be able to dance, or to do things they just aren’t able to do in RL….Endorphins have no idea these people are doing these things in a virtual world…they just make the person feel good, so the depression is alleviated….it still amazes me..

What advice would you give to a Second Life newbie?

MB: Be polite, be humble, be whatever you want to be. If it’s not for you then that’s fine. Nothing ventured-nothing gained.

ZF: First I would tell them to NEVER forget there is a RL person behind that avi….so be respectful and kind….but to also take advantage of all the things SL has to offer that RL doesn’t, like dancing on a star, or the moon. Enjoy it, be yourself, and just have fun…..

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Published on April 14, 2009

Filed in Life

Flickr: All Rights Reserved

I recently received an email from a photographer who was a little perturbed about her Flickr photos appearing on one of the website my team maintains. She was adamant that, since she had set the licensing to All Rights Reserved, her photos should not appear on any other website without explicit written permission. This reminded me of something that Jeremy Keith had highlighted a few years back.  He created a PHP $stroppy_users array to deal with that particular problem!

The interesting thing about this is that Flickr doesn’t prevent All Rights Reserved photos from appearing on third party websites as standard. People who use the Flickr API have to build the feature into their widget. Surely it would make more sense for the API to block these kind of photos by default, enabling the widget developer to override this setting?

It turns out that Flickr users can prevent their photos from appearing in public areas by activating a setting in their Flickr preferences. This means that their photos will no longer appear in the public time-line or under the various ways of browsing people’s photos (by tag, by date, by location). However, plenty of photographers are looking to make money from their photos and as such would not get the desired exposure if their photos were hidden from public view. It seems that such photographers are keen that their photos are available on the Flickr public areas but not via third-party websites. There is no setting within Flickr to accommodate this requirement.

I put a lot of photos on Flickr myself. But I’m not a professional photographer. I have no intention of selling my pics and can’t imagine anybody would actually want to buy them anyway. I’ve had a few requests here and there from various organisations who want to use my photos (Southampton Football Club and Buckingham Floods being two recent examples). I happily let them use the pictures with the usual “as long as you give me credit” caveat. But I don’t make a living from photography. I’ve come to the conclusion that perhaps Flickr isn’t the right place for pros to set up shop. But what are the alternatives?

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Published on March 31, 2009

Tags: api, flickr, legal, Photos, rights, social

Filed in Work

Random ring tone

Picture the scene. I’m sat in the open plan office and I get a text message. My message alert sounds. Everybody laughs as the 70s Open University motif from the BBC trills through the tiny but impressively loud speaker of my Nokia e51.

As the day progresses I receive a number of other messages at fairly regular intervals. I reply, prompting the message originator to reply back. Message tennis ensues.

My colleagues grow weary of the once-amusing tune. I start to get a bit embarrassed. What to do? I could silence the phone but wouldn’t it be cool if the phone could select a message tone at random for each incoming message? Me and my colleagues would be treated to a selection of incredibly slick and retro themes to bring a smile and lighten up the day.

I realise I can assign different tones to different contacts in my address book but what I’d really like is a random tone per incoming message regardless of sender.

I’ve found a product called Best RandomRingtone which appears to do what I want but I’m not sure it will extend to message alerts too. I’ve not yet managed to shell out the $6.95 to find out. The lack of customer reviews or the fact that my phone isn’t listed may be putting me off.

Am I alone in thinking such a feature would be rather nice? Is there are product out there that will do what I’d like on a Symbian s60 phone? Do let me know.

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Published on March 30, 2009

Tags: applications, Mobile, nokia, s60, software, symbian, tones, vapourware

Filed in Life

jQuery UI 1.6: The User Interface Library for jQuery (Book review)

jquery-uiDan Wellman’s book jQuery UI 1.6 (ISBN 978-1-847195-12-8) from Packt Publishing is the kind of book I wish I had when I first started tinkering with jQuery.

Firstly, I’m a web designer, not a developer. Scripting scares me. I’m really out of my comfort zone when I need to bring a web page to life with things like Flash Action Scripting or, in this case, Javascript.

Secondly, I’m a fairly practical kind of bloke who would rather just get something done as a proof of concept and work out how to improve it later. I don’t want to learn a language like PHP or Javascript from the ground-up before I can do something like tab interfaces, resizable boxes and drag and drop widgets. So I never have.

The jQuery User Interface (UI) Library is preceisely the kind of thing that I need in order to rapidly prototype web interfaces. It’s a set of well tested widgets, compatible with all modern browsers (and some old ones).

This book explains in great detail, with full code examples, how to quickly get cracking with every part of the library. This includes tabs, accordions, pop-ups, sliders, date pickers, auto-complete, drag and drop, resizing, selecting, sorting and various animations.

What I most enjoyed about this book was the rapid pace that Wellman moved me through each of the widgets. First he explains the purpose of the widget followed by the default implementation, how to style of ’skin’ the widget to your own requirements and then onto the more intricate details of chaning how it behaves. This kind of approach is very accessible to me.

As a designer I’m quite interested in making the widgets fit the look and feel of my design. It’s rare that I ever want to use the default style and if it’s not easy to change the chances are I’ll look elsewhere. Each and every jQuery UI widget can be styled to exacting requirments and Wellman is keen to highlight this fact.

I get the feeling I’ll be frequently referring to the chapters on tabs, dialogues, resizing, selecting and sorting the in my day to day work. This is the kind of book you can confidently dip into when you have a specific problem to solve and one that will be a valuable addition to and web design bookshelf.

jQuery UI 1.6 by Dan Wellman is published by Packt Publishing and is £27.99

Read a sample chapter or buy the book direct from Packt Publishing.

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Published on March 27, 2009

Tags: ajax, book, jquery, Review, webdesign

Filed in Work

Learning jQuery 1.3 (Book review)

Learning jQuery 1.3A lot of web designers, myself included, are mostly concerned with the way things look when people visit the web sites we create. We’re all about the design — layout, typography, colour, graphics and how they enhance the user experience. We start with some sketches, do some wire-frames and rapidly move into software like Photoshop or Fireworks in order to get a pleasing aesthetic result that we’ll eventually piece together on the web using HTML and CSS. Whilst most designers find markup and stylesheets relatively easy to master, javascript sits firmly in the programming camp. It’s all about integers, boleans, strings and other scary sounding bits and bobs that often require a logical and mathematically able brain to understand.

Yet javascript opens up a world of exciting behavioural options to us. It enables us to bring our pages to life with all the wizzy and cool stuff that clients love. Things swishing in and out of view, dropping down, sliding, expanding and contracting. Javascript brings our flat designs to life. But it’s difficult. That’s one reason why jQuery was invented — to make life easier for web designers. If you’ve already mastered HTML and CSS then you’ll find jQuery a logical next step. It uses a similar code style to CSS rather than the all out alien language of raw javascript. Learning jQuery 1.3 from Packt Publishing (ISBN 978-1-847196-70-5) is the only book you’ll need to get started with the library if like me you’re a web design who wants to add a little extra umph to your designs.

You’ll realise that this is definitive tome when you see that it contains a glowing foreword by John Resig, the creator of jQuery. He praises the authors, who he knows personally and gives Karl Sedberg a particular thumbs-up for his excellent knack for the English language. Indeed the themes in this book are relayed to the reader in accessible chunks of to-the-point tutorial that will immediately have you eager to boot up your PC and get cracking with showing and hiding, fading, bringing content into the page by the power of AJAX, sorting tables and all manner of glittering delights that were hitherto beyond your mortal reach.

I was in the process of building a new website using the usual solid webstandards that have kept me in work with my current employer for the last seven years when this book landed in my in-tray. One chapter in and I was hooked. My original pretty and functional site was soon awash with plenty of little jQuery effects and goodies. Probably overkill for what was actually needed but once you start playing it becomes pretty difficult to leave alone. Remember when you discovered all those photoshop layer effects? Remember how you used them in earnest way back when? You’re going to do the same again here. But as time goes on you learn to use where appropriate and go throwing everything including the kitchen sink into a design. JQuery is another set of tools to add to your ever expanding web design toolbox and this is the manual.

Learning jQuery 1.3 by Jonathan Chaffer and Karl Swedberg is published by Packt Publishing (ISBN 978-1-847196-70-5) and has a recommended retail price of £24.99.

Read a sample chapter or buy it direct from Packt Publishing.

Comments (0)

Published on March 19, 2009

Tags: book, Books, javascript, jquery, Review, Web design, webdesign

Filed in Work

links for 2009-02-20

Mobile phone users struggle mightily to use websites, even on high-end devices. To solve the problems, websites should provide special mobile versions.

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Published on February 20, 2009

Tags: Links

Filed in Work

Guy no you cant. My last DVD player was £15 brand new from ASDA!

About this website

GuyWeb is the personal website of Guy Carberry, a web designer based in Buckingham, England. He currently works full-time as a web designer for the Open University.

This website mostly covers topics related to web design such as information architecture, usability, accessibility and user interface design. Find out more.

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