Two lessons for mobile designers you must learn

If I had only two lessons to impart to people building mobile user experiences, it would be these:

A smartphone is not a small desktop (or laptop).

You’d think that’d be fairly obvious, and yet a lot of mobile applications with desktop equivalents seem to be designed just as stripped down versions of the desktop experiences.

Take email as an ubiquitous example. Most mobile email clients are designed as smaller versions of desktop email clients: inboxes, folders, read/unread flags, etc. But if you look at how people actually handle mobile email, the usage patterns are different. Mobile email users focus on triaging mail by (a) identifying what’s new (which isn’t necessarily the same as what’s unread), (b) figuring out what they can delete right away, (c) determining what they have to handle immediately because it’s time critical, and (d) deferring everything else until they reach a desktop or laptop. And despite that different mobile focus, mobile email clients are designed assuming you’re reading and responding to messages just like on the desktop.

This point ties back to my previous point about feature selection: don’t assume your mobile users will interact in the same ways as your desktop users. Figure out what they’re really going to do and support that, even if the feature set and UI need to be different.

Users’ activities will span devices.

Continuing that email example. When users defer handling messages on their mobile devices, they want to resume handling them on their desktops and laptops. Why is re-marking messages as unread the way most users end up handling that functionality?

Another example: users who employ their mobile phones to do price comparisons will nearly always defer making a purchase from an online supplier until they reach a desktop or laptop (why is an interesting question; I suspect it relates both to the perceived time of completing the transaction on a smartphone and to a concern about missing an important detail on the smaller screen). Despite that common pattern, the closest I’ve seen to a mobile application that helps make that transition to the desktop is Amazon’s iPhone app that lets you save items to your wishlist. And even then it’s up to the user to remember that they added the item and to complete the purchase.

So there you have it, my two lessons everyone should know. Don’t design your mobile apps assuming they should be smaller versions of your desktop apps, and don’t assume the mobile app will work in isolation. Go forth and build great stuff.

Posted in mobile at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.

It’s not a phone…

For the last few years i have been using Windows Mobile phones.

It started when i bought a Sat Nav from Somerfield in their January sale.  It turned out that Sat Nav was in fact a WIndows Pocket PC.  A fully fledged PDA so i got a lot more than i had bargained for.  I played around with it a bit but got really frustrated with the fact it essentially reset itself everytime the battery ran down and needed all settings, software etc restored from a backup on the memory card – not very handy when all you want to do is tap in an address and get directions in a hurry.

I had a Sony Ericsson W810i at the time as my mobile.  When the contract was up i treated myself to a T-mobile MDA Vario II.   A Windows Mobile 5.0 phone.  This was the real deal with pull out keyboard and a whopping 2.8″ screen.

I was delighted.  I had th most technically advanced phone of anyone i knew.  Full QWERTY hardware keyboard, touch screen and access to thousands of apps and many of them free.  It was fully customisable beyond anything my mates had.  Unfortunately it resembled a common house brick.  Not very smart looking but i had the closest experience to full web access you could have on a mobile – not to mention the oportunity to change to a different browser if i felt like it.  I was very happy with the phone but was even more so when i found XDA Developers.

XDA developers (http://www.xdadevelopers.com) is a very useful online resource for anyone who has a (HTC) Windows Mobile device.  I found custom ROM’s that introduced new features that did not come as standard on the shipped ROM.  When WinMo 6.0 was released i had it on my phone long before T-mobile issued their official upgrade.  After two years – the longerst time i had ever owned a phone i got bored…

…and bought a used HTC Kaiser (O2 Stellar).

Once again this got the XDA treatment.  I had WinMo 6.1 on it in no time and 6.5 followed not long after thanks to a very sharp developer community – about 6 months before it was officially release on new devices!  I tried many ROMs on the Kaiser and many applications – and even had Android running on it briefly.  It was ownership of the Kaiser that allowed me to take up Geocaching (more on this another time… ) that has become my favourite pass time.

After 2 years of ownership my Kaiser died.  Just didn’t wake up one day (

I went in search of a new phone and one in particular really caught my eye…   Nokia N900

And can i just say what a phone it is.  It is awsome.  The spec sheet is impressive!

So far i am delighted with it.  The touch screen, whilst resistive, is awsome. Barely needs any pressure to be responsive.  I very rarely use the stylus – nowhere near as ofter as with the Kaiser and Vario II.

Head on over to www.maemo.org for more info on the N900.

p.s.  I am writing this from my N900 using MaStory blogging app.  Lovely!

Posted in mobile at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.

Got a new laptop today and installed the…

Got a new laptop today and installed the following essentials on it; Adium (IM), Backdrop, Dropbox, Echofon (Twitter), FileZilla (FTP), Firefox, git, Google Chrome, OmniGraffle (diagrams), Quicksilver (app launcher), Spotify, TextMate (text editor), and XCode. Already installed was Subversion, MySQL, Rails, iTunes. I use GMail and Google Calendar so don’t need email or calendar apps. Trying to find an alternative for the expensive Adobe Fireworks and Photoshop. Looking at Acorn and DrawIt for now.

Posted in soft at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.

multiAVCHD 4.0 Build 734 (Freeware)

The multiAVCHD application was designed to help you combine multiple AVCHD/BD folders and AVC MKV, TS or M2TS files into a single structure.

This program is for those of you, who want to:
- put up to 252 different files (MPEG2, Quicktime MOV, MKV/AVC, AVI/AVC, M2TS/MTS, TS, TRP, M2V, VC1, 264, MP4, MPLS, IFO, etc.) or AVCHD / Blu-ray / DVD / VIDEO_TS folders in one place and navigate all these via nice 1080p top menu:

- XMB style MENU: up-to 252 scrollable titles (similar to Playstation3 cross-media-bar XMB)
- SLIDE MENU: up-to 252 scrollable titles (similar to Apple iTunes)
- CAROUSEL MENU: up-to 252 scrollable titles
- THUMBNAIL MENU: 36 pages x 7 titles
- LIST MENU: 18 pages x 14 titles
- NO MENU: 252 directly selectable titles during playback

- Re-Author Blu-ray discs
-  Author AVCHD
- Author Blu-Ray
- Author SD_VIDEO for Panasonic MPEG-2 Viera/BDP
- Author HD DVD discs 3xDVD (HD-DVD on DVD-R media)
- transfer their DVD backups without reencoding into Blu-ray or AVCHD format (DVD menu is not imported)
- watch their Blu-ray Disc backups without reencoding (PS3) (just select your movie M2TS file from the original BDMV\STREAM folder (the largest one) and use it with multiAVCHD;
- you can put .srt subtitles in the same folder, named 000XX.srt where 000XX is your M2TS file).  multiAVCHD will split it in 4GB chunks, so you’ll be able to transfer it to your external USB disk or USB flash drive.

What’s New in This Release: [ read full changelog ]

· A lot of speed improvements and fixes. Real menu preview when HDAVCTN folder is present in imported compilations.

Posted in download soft at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.

I Color Too: Animals 5 2.0

I Color Too: Animals 5 2.0 Publisher’s description

IColorToo coloring books are exciting coloring software for children. The books are parents-friendly as well as software spreads over the whole screen and exits on certain double-key shorcut combination only so there is next to nothing chance that a child will jump into operating system and ask a parent for assistance. All images are exclusive for IColorToo books.

IColorToo 5 book contains 25 images of various cute cartoon animals.

Posted in download games at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.

Update – Freeware – Paint.NET v3.5.4

Paint.NET is image and photo manipulation software designed to be used on computers that run Windows XP or 2000. Paint.NET is jointly developed at Washington State University with additional help from Microsoft, and is meant to be a free replacement for the MS Paint software. The program offers a clean and easy to understand interface that includes all common editing tools, as well as clone stamp and various image effects. More advanced users will also appreciate the fact that Paint.NET supports layers with transparency and layer adjustments. Additional features include Red-Eye removal, image resizing, sharpening, multi-level Undo and more.

Posted in download soft at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.

Repair BKF Tool 4.3

Are you looking for Windows Backup Recovery software, which can effectively repair corrupt backup (.bkf) files and retrieve your valuable data from them then your search, has ended here because with the help of our Repair BKF software you can get back all your data from corrupt or damaged Windows Backup files. Highly advance SysTools BKF Repair is powerful BKF file recovery software for repairing corrupt or damaged BKF files in short span of time. Whatever be the reason for backup file corruption, Repair BKF software perfectly repairs damaged backup (.bkf) files and recovers data from them successfully. Our Repair BKF tool systematically scans damaged BKF files. Damaged BKF files & folders displayed in a tree like structure after scanning. You can easily navigate through the recovered files and folders and verify quality of the data recovered. Backup Recovery software is efficient to repair and recover BKF files of MS Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows 2003, Windows XP, Windows 7 and Windows Vista backup utilities. Evaluation version of SysTools BKF Repair software is also available for download. You can execute free evaluation version to analyze capabilities of the software. However, this version of the software does not allow you save the recovered data. In order to save the recovered data you have to purchase Full version of Repair BKF software. Now you can get Updated Version 4.3 of Repair BKF software with unique feature, which is “Partial Scan”. In large sized BKF files, you can do partial scan if you need only a few files from BKF only by losing $89.00

Posted in download drivers at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.

Feeding Frenzy Deluxe 5.7.18.1

It’s survival of the biggest in this action-packed deep-sea challenge. Eat your way to the top of the food chain and encounter deadly predators.

And keep an eye out for power-ups, mermaids, and bonus stages as you try to defeat the Shark King once and for all!

Here are some key features of “Feeding Frenzy Deluxe”:

· Stunning underwater environments and sound effects.
· In-game tips and fascinating marine trivia.
· Rack up points in your Food Bank to unlock 6 underwater screen savers.
· Two amazing game modes and 40 underwater levels!

Requirements:

· Windows 98/ME/2000/XP
· Memory 128 MB RAM
· Processor 500MHz or faster
· DirectX 7.0

Limitations:

· 60 minutes trial

Posted in download games at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.

Gigabyte M1022G Notebook Intel VGA Driver 15.12.75.1825 for Win7

CPU: Intel Atom Processor N280 1.66GHz
Operation System: Microsoft Windows XP Home / Windows 7 Starter
Chipset: Mobile Intel 945GSE Express Chipset+ ICH7M
System Memory (optional): 1GB SO-DIMM*1 (Max 2 GB)
Video Chip: Mobile Intel 945GSE Express Chipset+ ICH7M
LCD: 10.1″TFT-LCD, 1024×600 / 1366X768 with LED backlit
HDD (optional): 2.5″ 9.5mm SATA HDD 5400rpm, 160 GB / 250GB
I/O Port: USB(2.0)*3, Mic-in, Earphone-out, D-Sub, RJ45, 4-in-1 card reader (SD/MMC/MS/MS Pro), Express Card, Docking Port, DC-in
Audio: Speaker 1.5 watt*2, internal mic-in
Bluetooth: Built-in V2.1+EDR
Webcam: 1.3M pixels webcam
LAN: Ethernet 10/100BASE-T
WLAN: 802.11b/g/n, 802.16 WiMAX(optional)
3.5G Module: HSDPA support
Battery: Li-ion 6 cells, ~7800mAh Battery
Dimension : 265(W) x 191(D) x 26.5~30.5(H)mm
Weight: ~1.3kg (with 6-cell battery)
Docking Station I/O Port: USB(2.0)*3, Audio-out, D-Sub, RJ45, DC-in (M1022 Docking station according to sales region maybe optional)

It is highly recommended to always use the most recent driver version available.

Do not forget to check with our site as often as possible in order to stay updated on the latest drivers, software and games.

Try to set a system restore point before installing a device driver. This will help if you installed a wrong driver. Problems can arise when your hardware device is too old or not supported any longer.

Posted in download drivers at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.

Open Hardware Monitor 0.1.23.2 Beta (Mozilla Public License)

Open Hardware Monitor is a small and easy to use program that monitors temperature sensors, fan speeds, voltages, load and clock speeds of the hardware of a computer. To install just unpack the zip archive and run OpenHardwareMonitor.exe with Administrator rights. Without Administrator rights most hardware sensors are not accessible.

Supported Hardware
CPU core sensors:
Intel Core 2, Core i3/i5/i7
AMD K8 (0Fh family), K10 (10h family)

Mainboard sensors:
ITE IT8716F, IT8718F, IT8720F, IT8726F
Fintek F71862, F71869, F71882, F71889
Winbond W83627DHG, W83627DHG-P, W83627EHF, W83627HF, W83667HG, W83667HG-B

GPU sensors:
Nvidia
ATI

Hard disks:
S.M.A.R.T. sensors (optional)

Fan controllers:
T-Balancer bigNG (direct acces to USB-Serial driver, no T-Balancer Server needed)

Here are some key features of “Open Hardware Monitor”:

· Display of sensor value, min, max and (technical) limit (columns configurable).
· Window position and size is restored the next time the application is started.
· Sensor names can be edited (click sensor twice or select the sensor and press F2).
· Plotting of temperatures graphs (currently limited to max 100min).
· Display can be limited to certain sensor types (voltage, clock, temperature, fan).
· Hard disk S.M.A.R.T. sensor reading can be disabled to allow unused disks to be turned off.
· Minimize to system tray.

Requirements:

· NET Framework

What’s New in This Release: [ read full changelog ]

· Fixed support for more than one Nvidia GPU on x64 systems.

Posted in download soft at February 28th, 2010. No Comments.