I’m not sure why it’s so cool to put your photos on flickr. Is it to have them enter the marketplace of photos and rise to the top in popularity if they are good? Guess so, but it’s annoying for your visitors, having to leave your site and go to one that’s often slow to load.

 

design, mobile

Both Any Budd and Cameron Moll have made their web design predictions for 2006. Rather bland I must say, or perhaps that’s because there was nothing new and surprising to us. This new Deepend home site uses transparency, PNGs, rounded corners and is published for mobile.

Plus, we believe Mr Moll is wrong about the Fisher Price look being out: it’s barely begun to penetrate.

 

mobile

I’m in the market for a bluetooth QWERTY keyboard for my Nokia 6630. I’d settled on ThinkOutside’s Stowaway Universal Bluetooth Keyboard, which seems to be the overall favorite. Then I saw the VKB Embedded Virtual Keyboard (made in Israel, I’m proud to say, though their own website is as usual terrible). And now a third amazing option: Eleksen’s wireless fabric keyboard. For me the key is simply how well these actually work for fast typing. From what I read, the VKB only works very slowly for now—the wow factor is better than the actual usability. Now awaiting a product review for the Eleksen. Allaboutsymbian?

Update: positive review at the unwired, and here’s what I wanted to know: But it’s also definitely not as good as a real keyboard with plastic keys. The reason for this is that “touch typing” to a large extent involves the tactile feedback you get when pressing the keys – you don’t get really get this when you’re using the cloth keyboard. Yes, you do feel something when you press the keys, but it’s nowhere near comparable to the key travel you experience on a “normal” keyboard. I’d underestimated the importance of this until I tried typing on this keyboard, writes jenneth.info on an earlier version.

 

entertainment, mobile, Symbian

A team at Georgia Tech has devised mobile phone games in which you play using movement gestures, not by pressing buttons. How is this possible? By using the camera on the back of the phone! By using computer vision techniques like motion blur detection and optical flow it is possible to detect up to 6 degrees of freedom, they write.

Hat tip: I found this via Pasta and Vinegar, the only blogger so far to write anything about the Serious Games Summit Europe 2005

 

mobile, Symbian

Nokia 6630, VW Beetle of smartphones?

With its rounded bottom, a design previously ridiculed in earlier more bulky incarnations, the Nokia 6630 will, I predict, become a design classic emblematic of these mid-noughties. OK I’m biased ‘cos I have one but the phone is being featured all over the web as the representative smartphone. As I come across such images I’ll add them to the following list:

 

mobile, Symbian

Opera’s new version 8.5 of its browser for Symbian 60 has some nice new features but it lacks what I wanted most: to be able to zoom not in but out. I want to be able to see a page in its entirety, then zoom back in once a part of it has caught my eye. “Nokia N90 users will in addition have the ability zoom down to 20% to take advantage of the higher screen resolution,” Opera reports, but I want it on my 6630 too, and I don’t care if the resolution’s low as I’ll only be reading headers anyway while zoomed out.

 

etc etc etc
 


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