Friday, 10 January 2014

what can I say?

I've been busy. It was Xmas. People visited, hordes of them. I've bookmarked lots of interesting things to share and hopefully will get round to writing something before jan 2015

Wednesday, 18 September 2013

Thunderclaps and Phonebloks

This is a lovely idea: Phonebloks
In an attempt to stem the tide of electronic waste, a guy  in the Netherlands called Dave Hakkens has developed the idea of a phone that is made up of optional modular blocks. This allows the user to pick and choose the different elements that are important to them in a mobile device e.g. a better camera, a larger battery and so on. If any of the elements break then they can be replaced without having to throw the whole phone away. As someone who recently had to dump a rather nice camera aka an HTC Incredible Android phone because something went wrong with one part of the phone and it started overheating ( I shoved the phone in my bra while I ran the race for life and it was a hot day) I can see the point of a device that allows me to unscrew and remove an offending part and simply snap in another. There's a nifty little video that gets the idea across nicely on the website.
Dave wants people to support the Phonebloks project by adding their names to a list of people who will spread the idea all at the same time via a social media thunderclap e.g. set it up to automatically tweet from everyones account at once in a 'thunderclap' of noise about the idea.
Great idea ~ the thunderclap as well as the Phoneblok.
A lot of people have been sharing the link, liking the idea of a phone that is not tied to one supplier or network or manufacturer. I'll be very interested to follow its progress. I do vaguely remember in the late 80s or early 90s, when all computing devices were said to be heading for convergence with cooperation between the hardware and software and mac will talk to pc and vice versa and all will be seamless and painless. Still waiting for that to happen too. So it will be great if different partners work together to realise this in some way and then extend the idea to other appliances that fill the land.

I would have shared the Phoneblok idea when I first saw it but it took me 'til now to get over being more than slightly irritated  by the promotional video. So, to get it off my Android-phone-killing-chest, here's a little plea to those 'guys' who make these promos:


Dear Boys,
Next time you are asked to create a video about new technologies, remember that women make up more than half the population of the world. I can't be bothered to work out the percentage of women in your video but it's low. In the real world, women are Entrepreneurs, Designers, CEOs, Developers, Investors and Researchers. And enjoy taking photographs. Although I wouldn't know that from looking at your vision of who will come together to create the future Phoneblok world:

Ok, so you did have one female character using your technology. Maybe you thought you were being good guys by including a woman in your vision of the future, but why make her an elderly lady in a rocking chair who is used to illustrate the idea that there are those who need to keep their Phoneblok simple? Even if you wanted to make her a user rather than creator she could have been the photographer. Or anything. She may be hard of hearing but she could be a retired rocket scientist.
Yours,
A Granny
x

Sunday, 28 April 2013

Such a long time since I skyped with the Grandbabies, but today I managed to catch up with them to find out how their Fourth Birthday Party went yesterday. The conversation consisted of showing me toys, rolling around on the floor, smacking the computer and running away, and then my favourite, kissing the screen when they said goodbye.



Tuesday, 8 January 2013

XX Game Jam


In October 2012 I took part in my first game jam, where teams of artists, programmers, game designers, musicians etc dash to create a computer game within a set time, often with people they have never worked with before. This particular game jam was special in that it was super fast ~ we only had 24 hours to create our game or concept and also it was the first ever XX Game Jam ~ only women participating, most of them strangers to each other. 
We were quite quiet to start with, and stayed relatively quiet as we split off into our groups to start working hard on our games.
The theme we were all given was Clockwork ~ very now, very steampunk, and very open to interpretation in different ways, as evidenced by the different games that resulted.

Our small team of three had never met before and consisted of  Kimmi Gan, programmer  and Teri Mardel  - a games designer
We also had some input from Fiona French, who teaches Game design, and got us to stop long enough to plan what we were doing and work out how much was feasible to achieve in 24 hours, if we were intending to sleep at all.
So we set to  and developed a game which involved Ada Lovelace jumping up and down to release cogs that bounced onto a crocodile (a ticking crocodile, like the one in Peter Pan that has swallowed a clock).
The resulting game got simpler and simpler from our initial ideas of snapping jaws and teeth flying out, but we were pleased with our effort, which Teri labelled:  ”Tick Tock Terror”.
We didn’t win the game jam, but we did get a special mention for the aesthetics of our game, which pleased me, as the ahem, Artist (aw, shucks). I am assured this was not just because our main character was Ada Lovelace in a crinoline holding a spanner or that we incorporated Babbage’s engine as our background ~ it was because it was already playable, and albeit seemingly simple, Tick Tock Terror is surprisingly tricky.

The games from the jam will be online in early 2013 so you can have a go. There are some links below to the XX game jam supporters and also some of the press coverage. 


Organised by the wonderful Debbie Rawlings at Auroch Digital, the game jam was hosted by Mind Candy , creators of Moshi Monsters, in their outrageously vibrant and overstimulating offices in London.


You can find more on the XX Game Jam via these links, some with more irritating titles than others:

Wednesday, 19 December 2012

Laptop saga

It's back, finally. The laptop went off to the insurer's preferred fixer and came back ten days later (with a new screen, shiny!) only to frustrate me for 24 hours of attempting to reload all the things I had taken off it. It said it was attached to my wireless network, but was taking about ten minutes to access a webpage. And I made several attempts to get Migration Manager working to transfer between imac and macair.
I resisted booting equipment around the room. I mean kicking. I rebooted quite a lot.
In the end I phoned the insurer who agreed I could take the laptop to the place I had wanted to take it to in the first place - Western Computer near Temple Meads in Bristol. There, they diagnosed that whoever had fitted the new screen had damaged one of the two aerials, so it needed a new screen. And now I have my laptop back and it's working. Migration Manager took about three hours but everything seems to be there, and I have no excuse for not writing. Apart from the fact that I am meant to be tidying up for Xmas visitors.

Friday, 23 November 2012

updates and backups

I have spent most of this week backing up the contents of my laptop to as many places as I can think of before sending it off to be fixed. It was one of those random laptop-screen-meets-perfume-bottle incidents, where I stupidly didn't react in time to stop them colliding as they slid to the floor one after the other. I wasn't even using the perfume, just hadn't put it away.
So, I have used Time Machine (which comes with the mac) to back the macair laptop up on my iMac, and copied all documents, photos and videos onto a small (in size not capacity) WD hard drive, and just to be sure I am now uploading as much as possible to my Virgin Media account - that is the frustrating one because it is very slow over our wireless network.
I had a conversation on facebook about best back up plans - a couple of people suggested CCC: Carbon Copy Cloner, which apparently is really good as it copies everything to a hard drive and you can just reinstall it to your machine when you need to. I'm not sure what difference there is between CCC and Time Machine, but have decided that the main thing that I care about are files so am not too bothered if Time Machine doesn't reinstall everything. I could see it as a way of clearing out the laptop a little.
I can remember most of my passwords - I took a screen shot of all the web login names and passwords that I will delete. I also need to copy and delete the saved passwords for email accounts etc. And the emails?
Now I have to decide how much other stuff to delete from my laptop before it is collected to be assessed by the insurer-nominated fixers.
I will probably delete all my documents and images and downloads, and passwords, just to be on the safe side. Then curse when all they do is replace the screen and send the laptop back intact.
This is what the screen looked like at first, with the little black hole:
And now it's more of a strange dangling spider of an ink-blot that takes over too much of the screen:
So, heart in mouth, surrendering laptop to the courier on Monday.





Monday, 14 May 2012

Granny's Dancing on the Table

Not 'just' about grannies, but they play a big role, Granny's Dancing on the Table looks like a lovely narrative film project that invites involvement in couple of easy ways: Check out the video on their kick-starter site that explains the story and how they plan to share the film on a Creative Commons licence and create a related game. Then you can donate as little as $1 to get things going. 
You can also get your own granny involved by adding photos and stories to their collection at The Granny Invasion www.granniverse.com
The script for the film has already won a prize at Cannes, and the short snippets look really engaging. Take a look, help make it happen.