July, 2009


31
Jul 09

Chrome reflections: still needs some polish

I realised something very interesting about Chrome recently that hadn’t occured to me until I was installing Adblock Plus in Firefox. It’s not a dealbreaker but still: Chrome will never support decent ad blocking software. Think about it, where does Google get a large chunk of their revenue?

That aside, here’s an exhaustive list of why I want to switch to Chrome:

  • Speed.

However, its still missing some features preventing my permanent switch to the web browser on all platforms. In decreasing order of importance:

  • Lack of bookmark synchronisation, e.g. Xmarks.
  • Lack of (non-alpha) Linux support.
  • Lack of Mac support.
  • Missing “/” find in page shortcut.
  • Inadequate replication of the Firefox search bar.
  • Cannot set minimum font size in options.
  • Cannot customise toolbar layout (I could save 32px of vertical real estate by having my bookmarks and address bar on same line).

I have to ask: will Chrome just be this decade’s Firefox? Firefox (Phoenix) was touted as a slim, lightning fast, no-nonsense browser. But lately, Firefox has been slow to the point of frustration. This is either due to an intrinsic inefficiency, or caused by the Extensions “feature” which, uncontrolled facilitates user-crafted mega-bloat.


19
Jul 09

Reclaim your Google Reader screen real estate

If you’re anything like me on my and do most of your Google Reading on a relatively small screen (MacBook 13″), or on one of those nifty NetBooks I keep hearing about, then you might like to try this.

Stylish is a Firefox Extension that can apply custom CSS styles to certain webpages, in most cases fixing a user-identified problem with the design. DJBullwinkle has written a custom style called Google Reader Absolutely Compact which does exactly what it says on the box.

Basically, it makes several improvements on the much bloated default interface, allowing you to maximize the efficiency of your screen real estate.

  • Article text spans full width of screen
  • Compact no-frills borders around items
  • Almost all heading stuff removed, save for the search box
  • Narrower left-hand column

Visit the link for a preview of the changes, or just try it out! This has been added to my list of essential Firefox tweaks; it’s a godsend.

I should mention, this also removes some navigation buttons, so you’re gonna want to get up to speed on the keyboard shortcuts by pressing “?” in Google Reader.

My only real criticism would be to increase the size of article headings so they stand out a bit more, which you can do by changing the font-size from 100% to 140% as below:

/* shrink titles, but add underlining for visual identification */
.entry .entry-title {
    font-size:140% !important; }

I will conclude by remarking on a trend I’ve noticed in online interfaces since using websites which tailor their design to the iPhone and iPod Touch. These interfaces are some of the most efficient and user-friendly I’ve used to date: Google Reader, Google Talk Gadget, Gmail, FaceBook, Last.fm, ANZ Internet Banking, there are more.  Web designers should be reminded that only when forced to trim a design back to the bare essentials, do you realise what those essentials actually are. You discard all those tacked on superfluous features (Google is notorious for this, just look at Gmail), until only the functional ones remain.

Happy reading!


17
Jul 09

Broken Productivity Clock

I have observed this rather frustrating trend recently: illustrated by a lovely xkcd-style graph.

Broken Productivity Clock


5
Jul 09

Star Trek

Disclaimer: Obviously, this post will contain spoilers!

I recently saw J. J. Abrams’ film Star Trek and was left feeling slightly underwhelmed. I had heard good things about the film but left the cinema and was followed home by a daunting cloud of “meh”, which was quite disappointing. This puzzles me as the film certainly ticks all the right boxes. Abrams has got his formula down pat, now; his TV series like Alias and Lost were just warm-ups. Perhaps a parallel with one of the film’s main themes can help me here. It must be that logically, the film has everything required for a great experience. However, apart from a brief moment in the opening scene, the film failed to engage me on an emotional level.

Let’s see, it’s based on proven IP, which movie publishers love, as this almost guarantees a healthy audience size. Director J. J. Abrams on the ticket will attract the Alias, Lost, and Cloverfield die-hards (the latter includes myself). The loyal Star Trek fan base will go and see it out of curiosity; and the prejudiced die-hard Trekkies will see it simply to scoff at its inferiority. It has a great cast including Zachary Quinto, Simon Pegg and Eric Bana. Casting a couple of knowns means you get the Heroes fans and the Shaun of the Dead fans for free. The addition of Leonard Nimoy added a warmly familiar nostalgic touch.

Now, I’m about to risk sounding very sexist, but I disclaim that I’m only pointing out the Hollywood attitude to demographic reasoning, and in no way justifying it. Casting a relatively unknown but predictably handsome lead (Chris Pine) means the girlfriends will have something new and pretty to keep them amused while their boyfriends can enjoy his various macho exploits. And there is plenty of action to speak of: a healthy seasoning of well-choreographed hand-to-hand combat scenes, most of which are staged on precariously narrow or dangerously high platforms…or both. We also see some Point Break style skydiving suspense which was actually impressively well-shot; achieving the best sense of speed that I’ve seen on film to date for scenes of this kind.

That brings me to the production values, which were exceptional as to be expected. Special effects were of high quality without being over the top. I was only disappointed there was not more emphasis on the epic futuristic Earth that we can all hope for. It was briefly alluded to by the teasingly occluded glimpses of a distant mammoth city we see in the background of a scene from Kirk’s childhood.

Abrams’ Star Trek also more than delivers on sci-fi cliché requirements. Look I have nothing against cliché’s; when used well they provide a comforting sense of familiarity, and even humour in a lot of cases. Here, these include a scene where the extremely impractically overdesigned, yet epically scary-looking spaceship appears, ridiculously dwarfing the puny Earthen ship.

On the topic of ships, there is adequate symbolism regarding alien races. Romulans as a race are characterized by their spikily pointed tattoos which mirror the design of their ships. In contrast, Earthlings are perfectly groomed and wear boring monochromatic outfits, and their ships are very sterile and pure in design. Vulcans, as the allies of Earthlings appear only marginally different than us, and as extra evidence, we learn early on that the two races can cross-breed.

The word “singularity” was used more than once, and “alternate reality” was also thrown in, for good measure. There was plenty of complicated alien tech including phasers (Pew! Pew! Pew!), faster-than-light travel, teleportation, gravity wells and a last minute escape. We had close encounters of the chase-scene-kind facilitated by improbably large terrifying alien creatures. On more than one occasion, a ship’s shields reach a percentage below fifty which is stock-standard sci-fi speak for “we’re in the shit captain”. What else? Hover cars/bikes; automaton Robocop-style law enforcement; a scattering of comically unspoken yet curiously framed miscellany of supporting alien cast members; indoctrination of children instead of education. Finally, (and yes this is a sci-fi cliché) humans remain primally human despite their world being saturated by technology.

Which brings us to… The angsty teen demographic is catered for with both protagonists defiantly rebelling against the destiny laid out by their parents. We also witnessed a good deal of enough “courtship” including some unrequited lust, which ensures those teens who are angsty because they are just too damn horny will be able to relate to the film.

Yes, overall, careful analysis confirms the Star Trek equation infallibly satisfies the criteria for “perfect film”. Yet something was still missing and I wish I could find it, but my Vulcan discipline prevents me.

Maybe that’s it! Could the film possibly have succeeded in creating such a powerful empathetic connection with the character of Spock that I was left incapable of acknowledging any emotional responses? Perhaps, for the entire film, I was just unconsciously discarding them as counterproductive anomalies…

*breaks down and cries*