Puffbox

Simon Dickson's gov-tech blog, active 2005-14. Because permalinks.

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  • 16 Jul 2006
    Uncategorised

    Moving Picasa photos to Flickr

    My photo management software of choice is still Picasa – although only with reservations, as I think there are a few things it could be doing better. My photo website of choice is still Flickr… if you’ve ever used it, you’ll know why. But how do you make Google’s photo product talk to Yahoo’s photo product?

    The answer is staggeringly simple – and another example of how Flickr just keeps getting it right. I discovered yesterday, whilst demoing to my mother in law, that it’s possible to drag-and-drop from the main Picasa window into the Flickr Uploadr application. (Definitely on Windows XP, anyway.) Bingo – best of both worlds!

    I’m tending to use Flickr as the place for my ‘best of’ collection; the stuff I think other people might possibly be interested in seeing. Everything else stays on my hard disk, and is catalogued in Picasa. I’ve got icons for Uploadr and Picasa on my otherwise minimalist desktop, for ease of access.

  • 13 Jul 2006
    e-government

    More is less

    Once again, the guys at 37signals just get it right. People often think that the best system is the one with the most options, the most flexibility. Absolutely, scientifically-provably wrong:

    Offering shoppers samples of six items yields more sales than offering samples of 24, students who are offered six extra credit topics are more likely to write a paper than students who are offered 30, etc. In some cases, just one additional choice can produce outright analysis paralysis. People wind up frozen by indecision.

    There’s a direct application to government IT projects here. We talk all the time about ‘stakeholders’, capturing requirements from all and sundry, and (inevitably) designing by committee. This is precisely why we’re wrong to do so.

    Don’t take it from me… take it from Professor Barry Schwartz. He wrote the book on it. See him describe his thinking at Google.

  • 13 Jul 2006
    Uncategorised

    Memory prices getting ridiculous

    Amazon is now listing a 1GB SD memory card for jaw-droppingly low ยฃ11.29. That’s a stunning amount of storage space to be carrying around in a tiny device like a PDA.

  • 13 Jul 2006
    Uncategorised

    Please sell me your stuff, Apple

    I can’t be the only one tiring of the Apple hype. It was great when they were just a niche manufacturer of computers for the graphics industry… but now they’ve claimed a market monopoly, the rules – and the expectations – have to change.

    A new joint venture between Apple and Nike brings us the (fabulous looking) Nike+ ‘sport kit’ for the iPod Nano. You attach a ‘chip’ to your running shoes, plug an attachment into your iPod, and it records how far you’ve run, in what time, and talks to you as you run. It’s a fantastic innovation, at a startlingly good price… just ยฃ19 for the attachment, on top of the Nano itself. A range of new Nike running shoes is optimised for the chip, but these are optional, I think. (An early review on the Runner’s World website, if you’re interested.)

    As luck would have it, I found myself outside Apple’s flagship store on London’s Regent Street yesterday. No publicity for the Nike+ gadget. So knowing it was due out soon, I asked one of the ‘geniuses’ if there was any news regarding its release. No. Nothing. Blank looks. Suggested I went to the Nike shop round the corner. So not even your own online store then, which has it for sale just 24 hours later? Brilliant.

    I have ยฃ120 earmarked to buy a new Nano, and one of these. It’s yours if you want it, Apple. But I’m not sure you do.

  • 12 Jul 2006
    Uncategorised

    Death penalty for poor Tube etiquette

    I’m not really an advocate of capital punishment, but I’m prepared to make an exception for people on the Tube with those suitcases you pull behind you. We can no longer tolerate the brandishing of solid objects immediately below the average adult’s line of sight. I’m especially thinking of those people who take one step off the train, or pass through the ticket barrier, then stop dead to pull out the case handle. (We aren’t even going to begin to discuss people who stand on the left.) You have all been warned.

  • 12 Jul 2006
    Uncategorised

    Send Gmail from your own domain name

    Don’t tell everyone… but it looks like Google’s ‘hosted’ domain service for Gmail is quietly open for business. The language on the signup form remains quite dissuasive, suggesting there’s a stringent approval process. But I’ve made two requests, under two separate identities, to become a beta tester – neither, frankly, with terrific justifications – and both were accepted within a day or two.

    If you’ve ever felt embarrassed at having an email address with ‘gmail‘ or ‘hotmail‘ (or ‘yes-I’m-a-cheapskate’) in it, this is the service you’ve been waiting for. If you own a domain name, you can now bring it to Gmail, allowing you to send and receive email using yournamehere.com, like a ‘proper’ email service.

    For a while now, Gmail has offered the ability to ‘send from another address‘ – but at the recipient’s end, the Gmail identity often remains visible. In a worst case scenario, I’ve known companies to reject my messages as spam, because the sender address doesn’t match the originating machine.

    With this service, those problems are gone. And suddenly web-based email is looking a much better arrangement than using your ISP accounts. You can check your Gmail from anywhere, using any web browser – including mobile phone. If you want to keep using old-school email software, Gmail lets you do that too, once you enable it. The ‘don’t sort it, just search for it’ approach is genius, and you’ll have a hard time coming close to filling your 2GB mailbox capacity. Plus if you change ISP, you won’t need to change your email address.

    Oh – and it’s all free. All you need is your own domain, and that shouldn’t cost you more than a few quid a year. I’m using Pipex’s 123-reg service, and their web-based interface gives me all the configuration options I need. Just one word of caution: like anything involving DNS, it’s a pretty ugly process, and it can take a couple of days for any changes to take effect.

  • 11 Jul 2006
    e-government

    Prescott: blogs topple the official sites

    I think I’m starting to buy into the ‘bloggers vs Prescott’ story. Heather at Hitwise publishes some interesting data, which suggests Iain Dale’s blog is currently more popular than the Tory or Labour party sites. And Guido Fawkes is more popular still. Heather makes one extremely telling comment:

    While the news media have been madly covering the supercasino scandal, consumers are searching for news of John Prescott’s affairs.

    You’ll note the plural ‘affairs’ there. Certainly I’ve heard the same kinds of rumours, couched in similar terms to those used when referring to Charles Kennedy and alcohol. And we all know how that turned out.

  • 11 Jul 2006
    Uncategorised

    Enough!

    What’s the most important word in project management? Is it ‘requirements’? ‘deadline’? ‘documentation’? Here’s my nomination… enough. As in:

    • only writing enough documentation. If you produce something that’s dozens of pages long (and lucky you, if you have enough time to do so!), I’ll bet nobody has enough time to read it.
    • understanding enough about user needs to represent those needs as you speak to the programmers; and understanding enough about the technology to steer the user needs appropriately.
    • spending enough time in meetings, and no more!

    but perhaps most importantly of all…

    • knowing when to say ‘enough is enough‘. It’s an essential project management skill to recognise when things aren’t working as they should be; and having the confidence to call a halt.
  • 10 Jul 2006
    Uncategorised

    Sky News blog keeps its distance

    Sky’s new News Brief blog is a real disappointment. They’ve recognised there’s a gap in the market for a forward-looking blog, and promise: ‘News Brief is Sky News’ weekday blog to keep you up-to-date with what’s coming up. Exclusives, interviews, press conferences and hot topics – we’ll let you know ahead of time.’ But the resulting content is a rather ugly bullet-point sheet. There’s no sense of personality, no character to it.

    When this was first announced, I wrote about how this could be a great way to bring people into the Sky team. Remarkably, I think they’ve managed to do the opposite, reinforcing the distance between writer and reader. The anonymous and very impersonal third-person style – ‘Sky News has’, ‘Sky News is’ – makes it nothing more than a daily press release, when it could have been so much more. What a pity.

  • 10 Jul 2006
    Uncategorised

    C-ashley Highfield

    Ashley Highfield, the BBC’s director of new media and technology, earned a base salary of ยฃ281,000 this year according to the Corporation’s own website – an inflation-busting increase of 14.7% on last year. He picked up an additional ยฃ30,000 in annual bonus, expenses and benefits: although, when you lump it all together, it’s actually down on last year’s total figure of ยฃ320,000.

    This, you’ll be pleased to hear, is all part of the BBC’s continuing efforts ‘to bring (executive) pay into line with the external market’, having identified in 2004 that ‘BBC executive base pay had fallen significantly below market median levels.’ And in case you’ve forgotten it from maths at school: the median is the midpoint in a series of numbers, whereby half the data values are above it, and half below it. So apparently, half the people in comparable jobs are being paid more. Er, really?

    All thanks to the unique way the BBC is funded. And yes, my TV licence is due this month. Purely coincidental.

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