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Windows, Apple, and Architectural Escape Velocity

Windows, Apple, and Architectural Escape Velocity

In January of 2011, I wrote my first suppositions about “Windows 8” and the ARM processor architecture. Though we now know the version of Windows that will land on ARM will be called Windows RT, and the Windows 8 name will be reserved for editions of the operating system that will run on x86/x64 processors. In that blog post early last year, I stated: Microsoft has never sustained Windows on any platform besides x86. What would make Windows on ARM…

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User Interfaces – Pencils down

User Interfaces – Pencils down

In 1998, while on vacation, I recall having an idea about a new kind of computer. A computer where you could  use it as a laptop, or flip the display around and use it with your fingers. I let the idea pass, since I figured it was novel, but nobody would pay a premium price for such a device. Several years later, I recall when Windows Tablet PC was in it’s infancy, seeing a convertible Tablet PC, and thinking, “maybe…

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The fairest test I’ve ever given Windows 8. On my iPad?

The fairest test I’ve ever given Windows 8. On my iPad?

On Friday Morning, Splashtop introduced a new application, the Win8 Metro Testbed – powered by Splashtop. With both of the releases of Windows 8 so far, a key criticism of mine has been how hard it is to fairly evaluate the OS without a device that supports touch properly. Where Windows 7 is a desktop OS that offers little value when used with touch, Windows 8 is so touch-centric that evaluating it with only a keyboard and mouse is, I believe,…

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Force me to use a Mobile Site? Y U Hate Me?

Force me to use a Mobile Site? Y U Hate Me?

I don’t have a Ph.D. in ergonomics. I didn’t even stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night. But still, I have to say, I have to disagree with Jakob Nielsen in his blog post. Jakob states that if you build a mobile site (and he recommends that you do), that you redirect users to it automatically. This is not that different from the incredibly annoying tendency of sites to offer you their mobile app with the persistence that the talking toaster from…

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Windows application installers – the “sanitation engineers” of Windows

Windows application installers – the “sanitation engineers” of Windows

For most of my career at Microsoft, I worked as a Program Manager on Windows Setup. No, not the Windows installer. Windows Setup – the tools and technologies that took a computer either from an earlier version of Windows or a bare PC, to an installation of Windows. But in this role, I still had to deal with the ramifications of how Windows applications were installed, and often would see the work of other teams incorporated into Windows setup –…

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I’m sorry I missed your call (or, why my office telephone makes me feel stupid)

I’m sorry I missed your call (or, why my office telephone makes me feel stupid)

This is my office phone. See the red light? Most people who know me know that the best way to reach me is always my cell phone or email (or Twitter). But that red light marks purgatory for those who didn’t know. You see, office phones and I just don’t get along. I’ve tried, really I have. But these “designed by an electrical engineer” phones have always driven me nuts. Right up there with fax machines and printers, the needlessly…

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A Law Firm’s Twitter Spam Army – hiding in plain sight

A Law Firm’s Twitter Spam Army – hiding in plain sight

If you’ve read my blog or followed me on Twitter for long, you know that I love to analyze patterns in spam and scams. Over most of 2010 and 2011, spammers (in particular the porn spammers in late 2012) were very prolific. I believe recent controls put in place are helping to regulate the amount of spam on Twitter to a better degree than before. However, last week, something happened that exposed a weak point in whatever algorithm Twitter is…

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User Interfaces – Which way to the Metro?

User Interfaces – Which way to the Metro?

In my last blog post, I discussed the different user interface approaches that Apple is currently taking across all of its platforms. Four platforms, four slightly different answers. There is, I believe, a rational explanation for each of them – and most importantly, a rational reason for all four to at this point at least, not have a completely identical experience. In a recent meeting at work, we discussed Metro and WinRT as they related to an article that a…

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User Interfaces – One size doesn’t fit all

User Interfaces – One size doesn’t fit all

This is the first in what I hope to be a series of blog posts about user interfaces; where we are, where we’re going, and where we’re likely not going. Yesterday, as I was pondering this blog post, I thought about where we’ve come with user interfaces. Today, PC users often point to the iPad as not being “ready for business”, yet the same thing happened when the PC poked its way into the world of typewriters and mainframes/minicomputers, and…

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Nest Learning Thermostat – my experience so far

Nest Learning Thermostat – my experience so far

When the Nest Learning Thermostat first came out, I went through a couple of different modes of thought. Let me walk you through them. Bewilderment – I read the initial news about the thermostat and thought, “Tony left Apple and made… a thermostat?” Excitement – I realized that the design team had followed what appeared to be an Apple-like philosophy of simplicity and task-based design. Disappointment – I realized that it was $249, which was a little more than I wanted…

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