Mar 18Talking in Bubbles

A fascinating look at a prototype sketch of the iChat “bubble” conversation interface design from 1997.
(Via, Darling Fireball.)

A fascinating look at a prototype sketch of the iChat “bubble” conversation interface design from 1997.
(Via, Darling Fireball.)
Comment » :: Digg This » :: Categories » ...quick clicks..., Interface :: Tags » Apple, iChat, instant messaging, interface :: Related Posts »
If you haven’t yet seen it, it is well worth your while to take a look at Buzzword, Adobe’s newly-aquired, still-in-beta, Flash-based online word processor.
It’s a very slick, desktop-feeling web app.
Accounts are free, and fun to try. Especially given its import and export to MS Word format, it might be a nice solution to group editing.
Comment » :: Digg This » :: Categories » Web 2.0, Adobe :: Tags » Adobe, interface, Web :: Related Posts »

It’s the little things that matter in interface design.
For instance, I just discovered this amazing little detail in Mac OS X’s Dashboard. The World Clock widget (by Apple) that is installed by default has always offered a slick little display of the time in a chosen time zone, but at some point between Tiger’s release and now, (perhaps with the release of 10.5 Leopard?)1, they added one of the little details that makes Apple… well, Apple.
Now, when choosing a new time zone from the back, when the widget flips over, it animates the clock hands, moving from the currently set time zone to the new ones, including changes in day and night — and even gently accelerating from the start and decelerating into the finish!
As soon as I can get a decent video screen capture, I’ll post a glimpse of the animation.
No, it was not part of 10.5.2 — it was definitely there in 10.5.1, at least. ↩
Comment » :: Digg This » :: Categories » Apple, Interface :: Tags » Apple, Dashboard, interface, Leopard, Mac OS X :: Related Posts »
Watch this space for more! The blog hiatus is almost over! :)
Some minor changes in the works, and then some actual posts will be on the way!
In the meantime…
How to tell that your user interface needs some work:
When even the box your product comes in requires instructions to open.
(Thanks, Daring Fireball)
Comment » :: Digg This » :: Categories » Uncategorized :: Tags » interface, Microsoft :: Related Posts »
Okay. I’ll just throw all of my objectivity out the window at this point.
Apple has released an informative 24-minute video that provides the most detailed look at the iPhone that we’ve gotten (apart from Steve Jobs’ January introduction). I’m drooling.
Highlights include:
Now, pop the popcorn and go watch!
Apple has redesigned the iPhone site again. Now, it is looking more like the finished, day-to-day site, with a similar look to iPod+iTunes, Mac, and Support.
Now, they provide links to look up an Apple Store or AT&T Store location, but no information beyond “June 29 at 6pm.”
One tantalizing tidbit, though: In the upper left, Apple again emphasizes that an iTunes account will be required “to set up your iPhone.”
Perhaps the iTunes store interface will be used to set up your AT&T account and billing! That would be slick. Just the kind of thing Apple might insist on.
I like that theory.
Pacific Catch is now running an iPhone-themed calamari special. So, now you can get calamari there. :) I like these people. (Thanks, TUAW)
Comment » :: Digg This » :: Categories » ...quick clicks... :: Tags » Apple, calamari, interface, iPhone, Pacific Catch, video, Yahoo :: Related Posts »
I know — let’s make the iPhone even more attractive, so that it’s even harder to wait for the last 11 days.
This morning, Apple posted a press release announcing that the iPhone’s specifications have actually improved since Apple’s initial statements in January.
Now, iPhone has “up to 8 hours of talk time, 6 hours of Internet use, 7 hours of video playback or 24 hours of audio playback,” in addition to an impressive “250 hours—more than 10 days—of standby time.” This really puts the iPhone ahead of all of its ’smartphone’ peers, and even a lot of MP3 players.
Even if the numbers are at the absolute top end of the possible battery life (and what company publishes the average real-world use life, anyway), it makes iPhone very attractive.
Cue the Ronco announcer… And that’s not all! The iPhone’s entire top surface has also “been upgraded from plastic to optical-quality glass to achieve a superior level of scratch resistance and optical clarity.”
Very nice!
The press release also includes an interesting table comparing the iPhone’s specs to the leading smartphones out there. Spoiler: it’s really impressive.
11 days, 9 hours to go!
Already, it seems, the iPhone interface (borne of the iPod interface, in many ways), is inspiring new ways of interacting with users in other arenas.
A post reveals that InstantGallery’s newest version will employ an iPhone-like interface for its preference panels.
An interesting idea, well worth watching in the short video clip demo. »
Comment » :: Digg This » :: Categories » ...quick clicks..., iPhone :: Tags » Apple, interface, iPhone :: Related Posts »
Okay. I admit it. I’m obsessed. I’m readying my sleeping bag for June 28.
We, the iPhone fanatics, received our marching orders Sunday night, and we’re pointing our boots in the direction of the nearest AT&T (née Cingular) store. (Uncle Steve told us to avoid his own Apple Stores on Release Dayâ„¢, because that’s where all of the campers will be. Well, until he said that.)
We’ve gotten so obsessed that we’re already spinning out of control with wild speculation based on merely a few frames of one of the commercials.
The three new ads are all truly good — simply, smoothly, and stylishly making the iPhone’s complex set of features look natural, seamless and essential.
Even if you’ve never heard of the iPhone before (Really?), the ads make the device and its powerful, simple-to-use features clear in only 30 seconds (apiece).
As John Gruber points out, the ads sell the iPhone largely by just showing off its interface.
Its interface.
(That bears repeating. In its own paragraph. In its own sentence fragment.)
Yes, it’s the iPhone’s interface that makes it the product that it is. (Jobs: “beautiful software wrapped in a beautiful box.”) Making sure that the software is the driving force behind the product is one of the key reasons that Apple has had such enormous success with the iPod and has garnered such devotion from Mac users.
iPhone’s beautiful interface is definitely worthy of excitement, and the ads’ glimpses of that crystal-clear screen followed by the words, “Coming June 29″ have ignited the passions of the iPhone masses.
David Pogue is looking forward to the frenzy to come, and so am I.
PS: As one hype machine winds up, another is taking a surprising beating from various posts:
2 comments » :: Digg This » :: Categories » Products, Apple, Interface, iPhone :: Tags » advertising, Apple, David Pogue, interface, iPhone, Microsoft, Surface :: Related Posts »

There goes the neighborhood. The world-organizers at Google have introduced an impressive implementation of street-level mapping in Google Maps. They’re calling it Street View, and it allows users of Google Maps to get a virtual-reality view of selected city streets.
The photo-based VR experiences are similar to previously announced products from Microsoft and Amazon, but have a very fluid, natural, and (I must say) cute interface.
Clicking the ‘Street View’ button at the top of the map (in areas with this feature — including San Francisco, Silicon Valley, Denver, Miami, NYC, and Las Vegas among others) produces a little orange person-shaped figure, that falls onto the map (complete with a slight bounce!). From the orange person’s head emerges a familiar Google Maps balloon, filled with a draggable, 360° panoramic photo of that location.

Street information is superimposed, and arrows allow you to go for a virtual ‘walk’ down the street. Dragging the photo allows one to pan and tilt the view, and causes a green marker under the orange person’s feet on the map to rotate and point in the direction of your current view for reference. Double-clicking or operating the slider allows the viewer to zoom in and out in four steps.
My favorite interface touch comes when you click and drag the orange person icon to move “him” to a new location for a different view. Rather than just moving under your cursor, the little figure bends as if flying or being lifted by the hand of God with an ‘X-marks-the-spot’ cross on the ground below to indicate his intended drop point (when you let go of your mouse button).
There’s a surprising amount of detail in the photos, especially at full zoom. Though the quality of some of the VR constructions is a little lacking (sun flares abound, VR seams are often sloppy, and busses and other passersby often block views), the speed of the implementation makes the experience satisfyingly fluid.
Already, however, the level of zoom detail has unnerved the privacy-conscious. BoingBoing reports on many discoveries of interesting things in the Street Views, including a woman who reports that the detail around her apartment is good enough to look through her window and see her cat inside! (Take a look at the cat for yourself »)

Much discussion is taking place regarding Google’s use of images without making an effort to obscure faces and other details. Similar controversy surrounded Amazon’s now-gone1 A9 block-level photos. Interestingly, Yahoo and Microsoft go on the record to say that they would never do something as privacy-invading as Google’s implementation.
Is it an invasion, though? Google argues that the imagery is all taken from public spots, and is no more invasive that walking down a street with a camera. Further, they are quick to point to a form available to request that an image be removed from the database.
Perhaps that’s enough. Perhaps Microsoft is right when it argues that the utility for such imagery is just not there (Erik Jorgensen tells CNET “The feedback we got was that people like visuals as cues integrated into driving directions” but not to explore a ‘virtual world’).
Time will tell. For now, though, I’ll leave you with one last bit of interesting info — the car and patented 11-lens camera that captures some of the content for Google’s Street View. (Link »)
Be sure to smile if you see it coming down your street.
Update 6/2: GrokDotCom has discovered that Street View features seemingly illegal photos of the inside of the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel in NYC… Link »
Update 6/2: I hate to update yet again, but this archive at Threat Level is worth a look — it’s a reader compilation of odd (and/or scandalous) images in the Street View database. This is like one big scavenger hunt… Link »
If you missed A9 Maps’ disappearance like I did, the sort summary of their passing is chronicled here ». ↩
Comment » :: Digg This » :: Categories » Web 2.0 :: Tags » , Google, interface, maps, photos, privacy, Web, web communities :: Related Posts »
Apple has released iTunes 7.2 via software update. It promises the ability to use iTunes Plus, the apparent brand name for Apple’s previously announced DRM-free, high-quality download program.
Now, we just need the online store to update so that we can actually preview and buy “iTunes Plus” songs. Since the store did not update today on its regular schedule, it seems that there will be some sort of official unveiling Wednesday…
Update 5/30: It’s out now.

It’s not often that Microsoft is the company that is implementing breakthrough technology, but take a look at their new surface computing initiative. It takes multi-touch surfaces and puts them into a tabletop. You have to see the video.
While multi-touch is certainly not new (see also: iPhone), the mind-blowing part comes from the absolutely seemless interaction the tabletop has with digital devices like cameras and cell phones.
Can’t wait until this is cheap enough for home use. Link »
(Hat Tip: Mac Rumors)
PS: Don’t miss this extra video on page 3, highlighting multi-touch interface technology itself.
Update 5/30: Microsoft has posted their official product site for Surface.
Yes, I can’t get away without plugging the “conversation” that will take place on the stage of D5: All Things Digital Wednesday night between Steve Jobs and Bill Gates. Can they really occupy one stage at the same time without annihilation? Press Release » See also:
2 comments » :: Digg This » :: Categories » ...quick clicks... :: Tags » Apple, Bill Gates, D5, interface, iTunes, Microsoft, Steve Jobs, Surface :: Related Posts »
A promising new blog, fortuitous, with a great piece detailing how a Google Browser Sync’d copy of Firefox can be a gateway to a web-app only workflow. Well written, with excellent points.
I would add only one thing — in my web-app living, I have found java bookmarklets to be excellent tools. Link »
(Thanks, Daring Fireball)
Dive into mark (Mark Pilgrim) says exactly what I thought (more or less) about Adobe and Microsoft racing to “reinvent” the web. Link »
Well worth the watching: David Pogue (of the New York Times) speaks at TED 2006, with a great overview of the importance of simplicity in interface and device design.
I love TED Talks, and Pogue is a great presenter. This session is so good that it has earned this whole quick clicks post a “Fundamentals” tag. :)
The entire 20-minute session is available at the link. Link »
(Thanks, Bagelturf)
Comment » :: Digg This » :: Categories » Fundamentals, ...quick clicks... :: Tags » Adobe, David Pogue, interface, Microsoft, TED, Web 2.0 :: Related Posts »