Showing posts sorted by relevance for query blackberry. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query blackberry. Sort by date Show all posts

8.13.2007

It's not your hands, it's the device design

Snopes (ad filled, no copy and paste link: http://www.snopes.com/humor/iftrue/iphonethumb.asp)
has a debunk on a email floating around about a guy who, after years of blackberry and iPhone use, finally had this thumbs altered to be smaller.

The very fact that such an email is floating around points out one of the major design compromises of these devices: small size for usability.

The image to the right is actually of a large blackberry. The newest models are about a third smaller.

We've made a compromise -- we want something that fits in our pockets, but we don't seem to care if using it 24x7 cripples our hands.

In related news, and on a personal note, I turned down a Blackberry again last week. I like having my thumbs and weekends both in perfect working order.

1.29.2009

Pizza Hut + My Blackberry + Cultural Unawareness

Pizza Hut (one of my favorite blog subjects) is back today.

This post is less about them and more about me.

I live in a football-free world. I don't watch, I don't root, I don't discuss. So, until MSNBC started posting articles about the Superbowl commercials, I had no idea the Superbowl was coming up.

Pizza Hut doesn't know my very well.

They sent the following email to me -- which was viewed on my Blackberry.

The subject line of the email was, "Big Game, Small Price. Feed your Fans with $5 Pizza Mia Pizzas!"

Except the Blackberry doesn't have that much room.

So, I saw, "Big Game, Small Price."

And my immediate football-free brain thought, "Why is Pizza Hut emailing me about hunting deer?"

6.08.2007

Blackberry Avoidance

Said by me today,
"I assiduously try to quickly reply to any email from anyone who can assign me a BlackBerry."

8.28.2008

Bloggity Blog, Blog. Blog!

I have something like 90 "starred" items in Google Reader.

I star items when

a) I want to read them from home at length

b) they have some sort of video attached and I want to view them from home at length

c) they have anything that might be NSFW

or
d) I want to blog about them

During the Olympics I powered through a lot of items a,b, and c. I'm working on d.

I'm trying something new out-- scheduling posting through the blogger interface. So postings appear to be posted when I'm asleep (6:32 am? hah. right.) or should be at lunch (assuming I actually got to go to lunch at 12...).

We'll see how it goes. Comment moderation may be delayed b/c it's posting, but I'm Doing Stuff.

This week has like 2+ posts/day scheduled. I don't know if next week I will get the same volume, b/c it's Holiday Weekend And I Want To Do Things Not Involving a Computer. I suppose I could compose things while in the car (passenger!) on the BlackBerry, but, ugh, typos.


Also, if you have this embedded in your iGoogle page, google changed the name to the URL, not I. They REALLY don't know how to deal with a title involving greater than, less than, and a backslash...

9.23.2008

Who's Your Target Audience, Again?

I've talked before about how important it is to provide a website that works for people with less than stellar computers.

It's also important to provide access to people with cutting-edge technology.

Now, at this point I don't see phone-based web access as cutting-edge. I do see it as something concentrated on a few groups: the very young, the very busy, and those with money to burn.

If you're running a fru-fru salon, you might consider having a website that works on the mobile devices of those folks. After all, if you're running a fru-fru salon, the chances are that your clientel is going to overlap with, say, the Blackberry target market.

"Loading Flash Plug-in" is the last thing you want your clients' phones to show when they google you on thier shiny toys. Your phone number? That might be a good thing. A mobile-enhanced online appointment booking service? Even better. But your phone number, that's a must have. In plain text, please.

The fact that you've just made your site more accessible, more Google-friendly, and more usable? That's just gravy.

11.20.2007

Ok, This is NOT Zen CSS

So, I'm not sure if this screw up is MSN or NBC, but either way, in an era with Mac sales skyrocketing, Firefox use continuing to grow, and Blackberry trying to outpace meth as the most addictive habit on the planet, it's a good idea to double check your CSS.

2.24.2009

I don't know what's up w/ Gmail on my Blackberry...

But thanks to Google Hot Trends, I know it's not just me.


And once again, #7 is from House last night. Anytime there's anything really odd in the morning, it's b/c of something on Desperate Housewives, Grey's Anatomy, etc.

I posted on Twitter b/c earlier this week "frenulum" was No. 9 and I was curious as to what show that was from... but Twitter eats post w/ the word "frenulum."


7.20.2008

Putting Data Online At Last

Catching up in Google Reader gives me a couple stories that are basically... all about the online database. The capability of doing an online database only showed up 13 years ago, I continually wonder what takes things so long....

http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/3215463/ -- NC State Medical Board votes to put malpractice records online.

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/337459820/ -- NPR releases an API with access to stories from 1995 on

http://www.google.com/reader/view/feed/http%3A%2F%2Ffeeds.feedburner.com%2FMitAdvertisingLabFutureOfAdvertisingAndAdvertisingTechnology?hl=en -- Instant price matching with your phone (this is the third positive use for my impending Blackberry I can think of--- after "help, Google Maps, I'm lost" and 24-7 wikipedia.)

http://projects.flowingdata.com/walmart/ -- watch Wal-Mart spread across the nation

4.02.2008

Blackberry Browser?

Does anyone know what (I don't use one of the damn things) browser Blackberries come with? And is it available in a developer version for PC/Mac?

5.15.2006

I was looking for a picture of a blackberry

Google Images found me this:
http://cache.gizmodo.com/gadgets/images/washington%20blackberry-thumb.jpg

too bad I can't use it for this...

2.11.2008

Why You Need Experts

Everyone's heard the phrase by now, "If all you have is a hammer, every problem you see is a nail."

In IT, especially the web, this can be a big problem.

Let me tell you a story about a man I once worked with.

He was referred to me because he needed "a database."

However, rather than getting some basics and spending a month setting up this complicated database, I asked some questions. (These questions used to frustrate to no end some of the supervisor's I had in the past--- "I don't want to explain what I want, I just want you to do it.")

Did he know who his users were? No.

Did he want to do data entry? No.

Well, what did he want to do? He wanted to search some files. He wanted other people to be able to use this search.

Were the files secret or restricted access? No, they were public records. He didn't want the link on the front of the website, but there was nothing private in the files.

What kind of files? Office files or text files people emailed to him.

Hmmmm.

At the time I had at my disposal two specific tools, one could do custom searches on a web directory, the other could take Office and other "typical" file types and convert them into web pages, and then publish to a directory.

He never got a database.

He was given a directory to dump the files into, and my team acted as his backup. If a file came in on his mailing list, he saved it to the directory. The next morning, the file had been converted to a web page and the search engine had indexed it in his special search.

The whole thing took about a day and a half to set up, including making the hidden landing page for the search look nice.

He was happy, his "database" (that's what he called it) did what he wanted with minimal work on his end. I was happy, I didn't have to develop a database, a web application to search it, and a password schema for external users.

Sometimes people latch on to a specific word or technology and think it must do what they want.

I want a blog to share files with other users.
Do you want comments on your files?
No.
Is this public access?
No. There's about 5 people.
Have you looked into a Sharepoint setup?
What's Sharepoint?

I need a spreadsheet.
Ok, what will you do with it?
Standardized data entry and reports.
Have you thought about a database?
No. How is that different?

We need Flash!
What do you want to do with Flash?
We want to make this website look cool! We want big movies about how great we are loading up whenever someone opens our page.
Who are your users?
Another department/organization/company has Flash and their boss met our boss at a conference and now we look lame.
Just humor me, who are your customers?
We help homeless people find jobs. They use donated computers with modems we set up at the shelters.
(
Time to delegate to someone who doesn't care about usability (and back slowly out of the room.))

We need GPS on all our field peoples phones.
Are the locations the people will be going in a GIS file?
No.
Do you have anyone to create GPS reports?
No.
Do you have anyone to read GPS reports?
No.
Do you have anyone to monitor GPS tools?
No.

What do you need to know?
What site they are at, but the supervisors need the phones to not be loud all the time, and only one person can call at once.
Would text messaging solve this problem? Or perhaps Blackberry emails?

We need a website.
What kind of website?
We have a lot of field people we need to get announcements to.
They work in the field all day?
Yes, they are only allowed to be in the building for fifteen minutes a day.
Do they have internet or intranet access in the field?
No. They all have phones, that's it.
Do the phones support text messages?
Yeah.
Let me show you what we can do with a mailing list....

You need experts because they know about all the tools in the toolbox. They know what the tools are, and they know when they should be used. They might not even be the one to use the tool (would you expect your arc welder to know how to hang sixty foot drapes?), but they will know when the tool should be used and why.

You need experts so they can help you find the best solution to your issue, not just a solution.

If you don't talk to your experts, you wind up with systems that don't really do what you need, and in the end, that can be worse than no system at all.

1.21.2009

Yeah, That's Why It's Known As a "Crackberry"


On the other hand, if it takes the addictive factor to get a president to use e-mail, ok then...
I wonder if he was looking something up in Wikipedia? Lord knows that's one of *my* number one uses....
Ed: More on the new president and his beloved Blackberry: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28780205/

6.25.2008

New Users Everyday...

GUTHRIE, Oklahoma (AP) -- A 3-year-old girl used a simple song her mom made up to teach her how to call 911 to summon help when mom fainted.


When the 24-year-old and 3-months-pregnant Jessica Eaves fainted, Madelyn used the song "911 Green" to dial for help on her mother's BlackBerry phone, punching in 911, then the green send button to place the call as she had been taught just a week before.


The girl was connected to a dispatcher. In recently released transcripts of her May 27 911 call, Madelyn was able to answer questions about her house and cars outside, leading emergency workers to the home.


This isn't the first time Madelyn has used a cell phone to call for help for her mother.


A year ago, Eaves first learned she had a condition that can cause frequent fainting and made up a simple song around the lyrics "green, green, green." When Eaves lost consciousness back then, Madelyn picked up a cell phone and pressed the green button, which called the last person Eaves had called and that person called for help.


So Eaves revised the words to "911 green, 911 green," referring to the color of the send button on most cell phones.

9.10.2008

Dear Voice Mail Programmers,

Could you set an industry standard sometime in the next decade?

I've got three voice mail accounts (cell, blackberry, desk) and they all use a different code for delete. Two of the three are owned by the same darn MegaConglomaCorp.

Seriously, making the generic functions standard doesn't mean you have to destroy all security standards, I promise.

If these industries

can all set standards, why can't you?

1.20.2008

Yes, If You Make It Better for Them...

Long link to summary of (ugh) account protected article:
http://consumerist.com/346980/companies-respond-to-wrap+rage-design-packaging-that-isnt-so--difficult-to-open

Basic summary: companies finally realize the evil molded plastic theft-proof containers cause problems when people try to open them.

Corporate wow moment: Baby boomers are getting old! Can't open the damn things!

Result: Movement to make them easier to open.

Chorus of joy from: everyone who ever has to open one

Reflection: Accessibility and usability and even mobile design are the same thing-- if you make your site/product easier for the mobility-impaired / deaf / blind / ESL to use, you also make it easier for the clumsy / lazy / confused / multi-tasking / blackberry-snared to use.