Great web app: Draw a symbol, search engine looks up the Latex-code. Very handy for my current thesis chapter with lots of equations.
http://detexify.kirelabs.org/classify.html
Thanks@nata
Great web app: Draw a symbol, search engine looks up the Latex-code. Very handy for my current thesis chapter with lots of equations.
http://detexify.kirelabs.org/classify.html
Thanks@nata

My dad had told me it was the iPod of its day.
He had told me it was big, but I hadn’t realised he meant THAT big. It was the size of a small book.
When I saw it for the first time, its colour also struck me. Nowadays gadgets come in a rainbow of colours but this was only one shade – a bland grey.(…)
When the Sony Walkman was launched, 30 years ago this week, it started a revolution in portable music. But how does it compare with its digital successors? The Magazine invited 13-year-old Scott Campbell to swap his iPod for a Walkman for a week.

The NPR, the National Public Radio (USA), asked their audience about what children do with technology. The responses gave a nice overview of the current momentum of technology in the life of the very young.
“We saw a bit of trend in your stories: cell phones + water = gadget death. A surprising number of variations on that theme involved toilets, pet water bowls and kid drool. Still a whole other category involved stories of repeated 911 dialing, hiding tech toys from stressed parents and inserting all sorts of food into drives and slots of all kinds.
But not all stories involved destruction or police knocking at the door. Below are some of the standouts (…)”
Submitted through Twitter:
There are still some usability and ethical issues: please wear this hat so we can read your mind; but the principle works. Brainscans to identify you.
original article @ the guardian
Now we’re talking UX-research. Children in “Voorburg” received an internet-only iPhone to test a mobile educational site. The site WRTS is designed to help learning words. The launched a mobile version of the site, which is now tested with the iPhone.
One glitch already frustrates the young users: the iPhone “corrects” the entries by capitalizing the first word – while the wrts ís case sensitive. Typing “free iPhone” results in submitting “Free iPhone”, which results in “WRONG – the correct answer is: free iPhone”!
ARGH!

Designing interfaces for the art of music. Sound generation has become independent of form (acoustics being taken care of digitally). What should a musical instrument look like? WIRED presents eight examples. Take a look at the BEAMZ, the Boing Boing or the Gypsi MIDI.

Google recently released it’s own browser: Chrome. Using it is of course a trade of privacy versus convenience. However, now there is an unpolished version: Iron. Some German software developers stripped the source code of Chrome from any reference or feedback link to Google. Browse with the benefits of Chrome, and whithout the privacy worries.
Outdoctrination, I am outdoctrinated, you are outdoctrinated? Children behave beyond the descriptive power of science in Sugata Mitra: Can kids teach themselves?, an inspiring and revealing talk at the LIFT conference 2007 in Geneva.
Sugata Mitra worked on the “internet in a wall” experiment. Take a monitor, put it in a hole in the wall and provide a mouse. Watch what happens when children start to discover. Repeat all over “demographically-rich” India.
The full presentation takes 21 minutes. If you want to skip the intro and experimental scientific stuff, FFWD to approx 15 minutes in time where he presents his findings. Some high-lights:
Watch the video at TED.com
The “kid’s stuff session” was interesting, especially the first two presentations:
Great work! (more…)
Remember my earlier post on wii-accidents? Well, the story continues. Nintendo could not turn the tide with just an improved version of the strap, as physical gaming continues to produce physical accidents.
Now I understand why the wii was not included in the e-fit zone.
You can submit your ‘experience’ at wiihaveaproblem.com, like the father of the kid below.