Ben Bodien

Design, web dev, photography, and the percolations of an Internet peregrinator.

I'm available on Skype, or you can email me at thisdomain dot com.

Sep 10
Permalink
Sep 08
Permalink
Permalink

Modular Wine Glasses

A reinvention of the wine glass set by Sherwood Forlee. Metal stems for enhanced strength and interchangable glasses for easier storage.

Modular wine glasses

More photos over at Yanko Design.

Sep 01
Permalink

Good Night Firefox (Good Morning Chrome?)

Some exciting times may be just around the corner in web browser land, as news of Google’s rumoured foray into the browser market is “leaked” in the form a rather spectacular Scott McCloud drawn comic strip.

Here are some highlights:

  • WebKit based: debatably the best performing rendering engine out there at the moment
  • Tab process isolation: one process per browser tab, so one tab crashing will only lose you that tab, like having everything in Prism or Fluid (also delivering security and performance benefits)
  • V8 javascript VM: a ground-up rethink of a modern javascript Virtual Machine — faster better stronger
  • The might of the Google server farm being put to work on software testing, including tests of rendering bugs

The obvious question that remains unanswered by this lovely graphic medium for product introduction is; “can I get my Firefox extensions into it?”. The extensions I use on a daily basis are probably all that are keeping me from switching to Safari or Opera, and I put up with a lot of crashes for those extensions. Here’s hoping there will at least be a means for extension developers to port their code to Chrome, and that Firebug crosses the gap quickly.

I’m predicting that the Google effect will kick-start a strong take up rate, but it will be very interesting to see how things stand in terms of market share a couple of months after Chrome launches.

Aug 27
Permalink

Olympic Medal Table Bias

Now that the spectacular events in Beijing have drawn to a close, I’ve been looking at the final medal tables and how different news sites are representing them.

There’s something suspicious about the sorting order. The official table ranks by gold medal count (but includes a rank by total medals), putting China in first place. This method is also used by the relatively neutral Reuters and the BBC.

Curious then, how the some US news sources are choosing to sort by the total medal count, which puts the USA out in front. How convenient:

Permalink
Aug 22
Permalink
Small Talk with a Web Designer (via SwissMiss)

Small Talk with a Web Designer (via SwissMiss)

Aug 20
Permalink
Aug 15
Permalink

A Bizarre Attack on Fire Eagle

The BBC ran an article today voicing the concerns of a couple of privacy groups over Yahoo’s Fire Eagle.

I’d love to know whether the director at the Centre for Digital Democracy actually used the service before declaring that sites like Fire Eagle are “building and collecting more data, not just about the content you like but where you go and where you are at the moment.” I’ll have to assume that he hasn’t, or he’d know just how daft he sounds implying that Fire Eagle is collecting data (it only stores the most recent location of each user), and that this data is being held for the purposes of extracting patterns in user behaviour (rather hard to do with a single location record per user).

I had reservations about using Fire Eagle at first, but after getting it set up and experiencing the extent to which its creators have gone to ensure that the information you provide is safe, I’ve been nothing but impressed and perfectly comfortable with it. There are a number of controls in place to keep your data safe. Here they are:

  1. You can provide your location with as much or as little precision as you like, as accurate as exact latitude and longitude or as vague as your country.
  2. You choose which third party applications you want to use, and you can stop sharing your location with them at any time.
  3. You decide how much precision each third party application that you authorise receives regarding your location.
  4. Fire Eagle reminds you on a regular basis which applications you are sharing location data with, and unless you explicitly confirm that you’re still happy with that, it will block all application updates for you.
  5. You can put a temporary block on application integration so that you can go off-radar for as long as you want.
  6. You can purge your location data from Fire Eagle at any time.

That all sounds pretty democratic to me, though it somehow fails to satisfy the CfDD’s definition of the word.

Quite honestly, if half the web applications that store personal data paid even a tenth of the level of attention to the issue of privacy as Yahoo have done with Fire Eagle, the Internet would be a better place. The Brickhouse team are doing an incredible job, and I have to believe that there are more appropriate targets for this kind of misguided assault.

Aug 13
Permalink

Endanged indigenous cultures, and the extreme diversity of their realities.