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Hi, I'm Martijn Vreugde this is a collection of my rambling thoughts on modern media, inspirational design and... well pretty much anything I found interesting enough to share with you fine upstanding folks of the internet.
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Leap represents an entirely new way to interact with your computers. It’s more accurate than a mouse, as reliable as a keyboard and more sensitive than a touchscreen. For the first time, you can control a computer in three dimensions with your natural hand and finger movements.
This isn’t a game system that roughly maps your hand movements. The Leap technology is 200 times more accurate than anything else on the market — at any price point. Just about the size of a flash drive, the Leap can distinguish your individual fingers and track your movements down to a 1/100th of a millimeter.
This is like day one of the mouse. Except, no one needs an instruction manual for their hands.
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South Africa and Australia will split the Square Kilometre Array, a €1.5-billion (US$1.9-billion) project made up of 3,000 15-metre-wide dishes and an even larger number of simple antennas. The decision was announced at a meeting outside of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, following a vote by SKA’s international board.
“We have decided on a dual site approach,” SKA board chairman John Womersley said at a press conference, according to the BBC.
When completed around 2024, the telescope will be able to image the Universe at the time when the first stars and galaxies began to form. It will be 50 times more sensitive than current instruments and capable of spotting a television signal from a nearby star.
South Africa has been in a fierce competition with Australia and New Zealand over rights to host the project. In March, South Africa narrowly won out in a scientific assessment of the two sites. The results of the science panel’s decision have not been made public, but low construction costs and the high altitude of the site in the remote northern reaches of the country were believed to have given it the edge. Australia and New Zealand have argued that their site in western Australia would have better infrastructure and lower insurance costs.
Splitting the site is politically expedient, but it will not be cheap, nor easy. Each of SKA’s thousands of elements will transmit 160 gigabytes of data per second. That data will passed through a correlator that will assemble it into a single image, and undergo further processing. As a result, both of the remote sites will require high-speed networking and powerful supercomputers, along with roads and buildings. The redundancy could significantly raise the costs of the project.
With the siting issue resolved, the SKA organization will have to turn its attention to financing. Rather than providing funding directly, SKA’s member states are likely to make “in kind” contributions of equipment and expertise. Construction could begin as soon as 2016 and first observations could be made by the end of the decade.
Google Chrome has been long expected to leapfrog Microsoft’s Internet Explorer (IE) to take its position as the Web’s most used browser and, according to data from Statcounter, the momentous change of leadership happened last week.
The firm’s latest figures — spotted by Global Nerdy blogger Joey deVilla – show that Chrome’s line of usage creeped overtook IE’s for the first week ever, with Firefox, Safari and Opera completing the top five respectively.
Statcounter’s findings give Google a double win, after the analytics site found that its mobile browser — Android Robot — had leapfrogged Opera to become the most popular option for mobile-based Web surfers in March.
Measuring the Web is an imprecise science, very often based on scaling up small scale measurement surveys, but the gist of Statcounter’s data over the last year indicates that Chrome use is rising of Chrome at the expense of IE and Firefox, regardless of the exact precision of the data.
Statcounter first found Chrome to be ahead for just one day, back on March 18, and its breakdown of browser usage over May to date puts Chrome and IE almost neck-and-neck at around 33 percent for the month. However, given that last week saw Chrome push ahead, May could become the first month during which the Google-owned browser has been the most popular option.
Google Chrome has come on leaps and bounds since launching in 2008. Extensions are a key part of the browser’s appeal, with the latest additions including a scheduler for Google+, a Pinterest like script and these further 9 recommended extensions.
Google is big on internationalising its service and Chrome is now different. For example, its My Chrome Theme social tool just became available in 36 more languages, to help increase its appeal across the planet.
Microsoft isn’t taking the challenge lying down and Statcounter recently suggested that the latest version of IE (9) is making progress, and is seeing particularly marked usage over the weekends.
Regardless of whether Chrome can maintain its momentum over the rest of May to top the month’s use, Chrome is on the up and we’d expect it to reign supreme in the Web browser world sooner rather than later.
The iPhone 5 is rumored to be coming later this year, with an official announcement expected in June around Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC).
Based on some of the latest rumors regarding the phone and what we can expect, one artist, Jon Fawcett, created some concept pictures of what he thinks Apple’s newest iPhone will look like when it hits store shelves.
Rumor has it that the next version of the iPhone will be made of LiquidMetal. A mix of several different metals, LiquidMetal could allow the phone to be more durable. Light like plastic but durable like aluminum, it would also allow the phone to weigh less and have a thinner profile.
Measuring at 4.14″ x 2.25″, Fawcett’s concept phone is just 7mm thick and has a 4-inch widescreen multitouch display. The phone has a 10-megapixel rear-facing camera, 5-megapixel forward-facing cam for video chatting, and quad speakers for listening to tunes or watching videos in both portrait and landscape mode.
Fawcett isn’t affiliated with Apple in any way, and doesn’t really know what the newest version of the phone will look like — the pictures, however, are pretty impressive and can offer a glimpse at what might potentially be in store for us later this year.
Beyond aesthetics, the newest iPhone is also rumored to have updated specs under the hood, including a faster processor and NFC capabilities.
Check out the gallery below for a look at the concept iPhone 5. Do you think Apple’s next iPhone will look like this?
What will the next iPhone look like? Recent iPhone rumors have suggested it might be made of futuristic material known as LiquidMetal. That got us wondering how such a handset might appear.
Enter designer Antoine Brieux, who took the idea of a LiquidMetal iPhone to the next level, visualizing it for us in these lovely graphics.
His flight of fancy replaces the physical home button with a virtual one, gives the iPhone a slightly larger size than earlier rumors predicted, and depicts the iPhone as a slinky, sexy and mysterious siren in these gorgeous renderings.
FNB continue to build competitive advantage over their Big Four counterparts. Recently they’ve rewired their offering and communication to focus on benefits and value. In another milestone they have just launched their new branch concept: Dot FNB is a high-tech, service geared, cashless environment (except for ATMs) that’s said to be “a whole new level in banking efficiency”.
The clear line of sight, high tech feel and counter full of tablets on display make it easily mistakable for a technology retailer.
Their apps are built for all platforms (iPhone, Blackberry, Android, Palm and Nokia) so they offer the latest model gadgets.
With Microsoft Surface they’ve developed an interactive table with financial planning tools (gimmick maybe, but this table features often in design concepts and far less often in reality):
Their Dot FNB app uses augmented reality to overlay information on things within the branch. If you point a device running the app at any of their products (which are merchandised in boxes) the app unpacks the box in front of your eyes to let you know what features that product offers:
If you point the device at an FNB logo it brings up the history of FNB:
The branch only features electronic posters, which I’d presume can be centrally controlled across all their branches:
Their conference cubicles offer very efficient video conferencing technology for video consultations, so you can chat face to face with your banker from any branch with this feature:
To top off the new branch they only close at 19:00 on week days and 16:00 on Sundays and public holidays:
Disclaimer: the gentleman that showed me around gave me permission to take photos and blog them, saying, “why not, free advertising..”
Back in the early days of human existence, before language had fully developed, our caveman ancestors probably did a lot of grunting. Language, and thus life, were pretty simple: watch out for that saber-toothed tiger (“Blorg! AIYA!!!”); stop riding the wooly mammoth and help me pick some berries (“Argh. Zagle zorg!”); man, it’s cold in this Ice Age (“Brrrr.”).
Somewhere along the line, all those grunts diverged into thousands of distinct languages, and life became both richer and more complicated. And for the last few eons or so, we’ve struggled to communicate in a multilingual world. Which brings us to today. Since the heart and soul of Gmail is about helping people communicate, I’m proud to announce the integration of Google’s automatic translation technology directly into Gmail.
Simply enable “Message Translation” from the Labs tab under Settings, and when you receive an email in a language other than your own, Gmail will help you translate it into a language you can understand. In one click.
If all parties are using Gmail, you can have entire conversations in multiple languages with each participant reading the messages in whatever language is most comfortable for them. It’s not quite the universal translators we’re so fond of from science fiction, but thanks to Google Translate, it’s an exciting step in the right direction. I use this feature everyday to help me work with teammates around the globe (they think my Japanese is much better than it really is…shhhh!).
Whether you’re reading a family update from inlaws on the other side of the world, working with a multinational team, or just trying to bring about world peace, don’t worry, Gmail’s got your back.
It’s been a long time in the making, but the once-mythical cloud storage service known to all as Google Drive is real, and it made its official debut today — and even though Goog’s taken plenty of time to make it available to the masses, our impatience certainly got the worst of us, and we immediately started digging through the new service. So what does this online storage option entail? Will it make you delete your Dropbox and SkyDrive accounts and jump for joy? Or has Google simply waited too long to start playing the game? Read on to find out our first impressions.

Cloud storage. You have it with Dropbox, SkyDrive, iCloud, and a gazillion other third-party providers. There’s absolutely no shortage of services available for your desktop and virtually every smartphone and tablet on the market. And oddly enough, Google has kept itself largely out of the game until now, content with simply offering Docs, which was doing double-duty as an online document suite and online data storage service.
As it turns out, Google’s had much grander plans for Docs — perhaps from the very beginning — and this is manifesting itself in Google Drive. Ultimately, that’s really what it is so far: a slightly evolved version of Docs with some new sharing, integration and developer features. Note that we use the term “so far,” since the tech giant has a knack for pushing out a service in its basic state and expanding its functionality and usefulness over time (one needs to look no further than Google+ as evidence of this). Drive, as we see it today, will likely be a much different service a year or two from now as it progresses.
As you begin using Drive, you’re given 5GB of space to play with for free, with options to pay $2.49 / month for 25GB, $5 / month for 100GB and $50 / month for a full terabyte. Upgraded accounts will also be blessed with 25GB of Gmail storage, a nice perk compared to the 10GB Google gives you gratis. If you’re looking for a price comparison between this and the competition, check out our table here.
Drive doesn’t seem to be terribly particular about the types of files you choose to store in your cloud — we uploaded everything from .mov files to Office docs and even APKs, and each one was easily downloadable — and every one can be shared with your peers. The only requirement we’ve seen so far is that no file can exceed 10GB, a milestone that far outpaces many of Drive’s major competitors.
Overall, there’s not much to the service beyond that. Google’s keeping it all simple for now, offering a desktop app that makes file transfers much faster and easier than what was available on Docs previously. Let’s dive into some of the features that Drive offers.

Not surprisingly, Google didn’t leave its developers in the dark when Drive launched. The Chrome web store already features 18 web apps with Google Drive integration, and the SDK is now available to everyone else that wants to add an extra dose of happiness to their own projects. Doing so will certainly beef up the appeal of the service as more choices get tossed into the web store, and we were anxious to check out a few of the apps already waiting for our perusal. So how can devs take advantage of Drive?
MindMeiser, a brain mapping application, now gives you the ability to view, share and edit map files directly from Drive. HelloFax lets you sign and fax docs, and even installs a folder within Drive that can store all of your incoming and outgoing faxes. Lulu’s web app now offers you the chance to publish your docs to its service. Aviary photo editor makes it possible for you to take any of your images, edit them in a new window and save the new version — as well as every previous iteration of the edited file — in your account. This is just scratching the surface, but we’re quite certain we’ll be seeing a lot more handy uses come as a result of the Drive SDK.

Have you used Google Docs recently? If you have, you won’t need to worry about getting used to some brand new user interface within the web browser. In fact, Drive exhibits the same minimalistic-style user experience we’ve come to expect across the board with Google’s suite of services, so it won’t take much time for you to get everything figured out.
Drive is set up with the search bar on top and two panels encompassing the remainder of the screen: the menu panel on the left and the list of docs on the right. From the left, you’re given the opportunity to either create a new doc or upload an existing file from your desktop. Below this, you’ll see My Drive as well as options for shared, starred and recent docs. There’s also a “more” section, which you can use to filter your choices to match whatever specific criteria you’re interested in. Above the standard list of docs on the right panel you’ll see a row of sorting and viewing options as well as a settings menu. Right-clicking folders or docs will also prompt a special menu of available features: you can go here to share, download, rename and reorganize the selection. There’s plenty more here for you, but many options will vary depending on the kind of file you’re trying to access.

All of the sharing functionality has been brought over from Docs. This includes public file sharing, a feature you’ll find on SkyDrive but not Dropbox. And as we’ve come to expect with any of the myriad services that the company boasts, it has been integrated (to an extent) with its social network, Google+. When writing up a new post, you’re now given the ability to attach an image that you’ve stored on Drive. Integration options will continue to expand over time, according to the company blog, as we’ll soon be able to attach stuff from Drive into Gmail (although this is admittedly already possible by using the Android app).
Something that threw us off at first was the matter of photo compression. We were concerned that large image files would be significantly compressed when we uploaded them to the service, and fortunately it appears that each picture remains fully conserved at its original size. The only exception to this that we could see is that when viewed directly from the browser, 4MB photos would show up as only 0.2MB. Downloading the file to your computer or Android device, however, still offered us the full monty.

Apple and Microsoft fans alike can relish in the spoils of Google Drive, because the company has made a desktop app available for both Mac and Windows. This app works in a very similar fashion to the kinds you’d find in other cloud storage options such as Dropbox: after a quick and easy installation process, you’ll see a Google Drive folder pop up on your desktop (or wherever on the computer you’d prefer to store it). Once there, the folder begins syncing the contents of My Drive, and within a matter of minutes you’ll see a representation of everything you have hanging out in your online storage. From here it’s just a matter of dragging and dropping the files you choose, no matter what type of file format you want to add. This is a great option for heavy Drive users that don’t want the hassle of uploading files directly through the browser’s interface.
After dragging and dropping your docs into your desktop folder, they’ll automatically pop up in the Drive on your web browser — regardless of which kind you prefer to use — and the service’s corresponding Android app. You won’t have to refresh the browser to see the recent changes, but you’ll need to manually do so on the mobile version.

The Google Drive app on Android is going to be an experience much similar to what we had with the web browser: the user interface doesn’t vary much from the original Docs app. Since Drive is essentially a one-upped version of Docs, it shouldn’t surprise you that the Drive app isn’t even a separate program — if you’ve been using Docs on your Android device already, a simple update is all you need in order to start using the new service. Upon opening the refreshed program, you’ll see a menu that offers to take you to the full listing or you can opt to see only items that have been shared, starred, or made available for offline use.
No matter which option you choose, you’ll still be able to access the usual menu in which you can create a new document or upload an image, music track or voice recording. You can also change how the docs are sorted or just simply refresh (read: sync) your folder to see any additions that have been recently thrown in there.
One of our major concerns when testing out the Drive app was if and how our docs could be saved directly onto the phone, without needing to access the app each time. Naturally, since every document can be saved for offline use, you can still easily view the ones that are most important to you regardless of your data connection. However, what if you want to save an image from Drive into your gallery? Or a PDF? How about a song or movie? That’s a completely different story, in most cases.
Certain doc formats, such as PDF and Word types, can be easily added to your phone’s file system without a huge amount of hassle. Upon accessing the file within Drive, you can go into menu, then file, and finally choose “save as,” which gives you the ability to save directly to your device (Dropbox and Skydrive are also included as options as well, though this can be done even faster by choosing the “send” feature). It takes a few steps, but it’s at least doable in a reasonable amount of time. They can also be reformatted to fit your mobile’s screen so they’re easier to read without pinching-to-zoom. Fortunately, these file types can also be sent to your local printer with no need to leave the Drive app at all.

What if you want to save a music file on your device? It’s possible, provided you’re willing to email it to yourself, open it on your phone or tablet and save the attachment from there. If you don’t want to worry about going through the process, you can still listen to it within the app itself, but it won’t play in the background, which means you’ll run into a major problem if you want to do anything else on your phone while you groove to your favorite jams. This whole frustration goes for several other file types as well, such as movies, images and even files that use the standard Google Doc format (Gdoc spreadsheets, for instance, can be emailed in PDF format, but can’t be directly saved onto your device that way by default).
If you’d like to watch one of the videos from Drive and you don’t mind watching it directly via the app, you can do so — but each movie file is highly compressed. When we uploaded a 350MB .MOV video to the cloud, our Android app proceeded to download a 7MB version of the movie instead. This makes sense for such large files, as a means to cut the downlink time and save your capped data plan from getting completely annihilated in one fell swoop, but don’t be expecting to get the best possible quality from it.
Are you an iOS user that pines to have the same kind of functionality? It’s coming sometime in the next few weeks, we’re told. In the meantime, just point your Safari browser to Drive’s mobile site and you’ll find that plenty of the same features are available to you.

As Google mentioned in its introductory blog post, this is just the beginning. And for the company’s sake, we hope it is. What we see today is more of an evolution from Docs than it is a revolutionary new service that will blow the mind of anyone that experiences it. That said, we also recognize that there’s plenty of room for growth, as well as further integration with the vast expanse of Google’s universe. Ultimately, we’re witnessing the company’s pledge to take on the likes of Apple and Microsoft with a fully capable cloud service of its own. Given its shortcomings, it’s got a long way to go — but at least it’s off to a respectable start.
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Apple has just announced that its Worldwide Developers Conference (more commonly known as WWDC) for 2012 will take place from June 11th to June 15th. It’s a little later than usual this year, a week after this year’s E3 event, but otherwise we expect it to bring the typical developer sessions along with the highly anticipated keynote address from Apple itself. Tickets for the week are on sale now for $1,599. There isn’t a full agenda up on Apple’s site, but there are plenty of details on the six different “tracks” developers can sign up for, as well as some events and awards that will take place throughout the week. We’re still almost two months out, but feel free to start prognosticating on the meaning of that logo now.
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The Paper App is a new app for the iPad. It was developed by Fifty Three design studio, they say the app is “the simplest, most beautiful way to create on the iPad”. The app works very much as a sketch book, you can capture your ideas as sketches, diagrams, illustrations, notes or drawings and instantly share them across the web. Check out the video after the jump for details on this elegant app in action. Free in the app store
Sometimes we get lucky, and today is one of those days. I got a draft release from a partner of Google’s upcoming Google Drive service and it gives away a wealth of information about how Google plans to take on the incumbent Dropbox. The short story? 5 GB of storage, and it launches next week, likely on Tuesday athttp://drive.google.com
Now let’s talk details. It’s no surprise that it will roll out for free. What’s interesting though is that Google is planning to start everyone with 5 GB of storage. Of course you can buy more, but that trumps Dropbox’s 2 GB that is included with every account. Dropbox does make it easy to get more space, including 23 GB of potential upgrades for HTC users.
What’s also interesting is the wording related to how the system will work. It’s been long-thought that Windows integration will come easy, but that getting the Google Drive icon into the Mac a la Dropbox would be a bit harder. From what we’re reading, Google Drive will work “in desktop folders” on both Mac and Windows machines, which still leaves the operation question unanswered.

But there is one very solid piece of news – Google Drive is expected to launch in the middle of next week. Given how big companies such as Apple, Google and the rest operate, I’m placing my bets on Tuesday, but Wednesday is also a popular day for Google updates. In fact, TechCrunch seems to have gotten their hands onto the app itself.
Now as for the reliability of the information? It’s not at all uncommon for big companies to launch with partners for new features. When that happens, the partners will often-times have a heads up to integration and specifics, and that’s exactly what appears to have happened here as it did with the Lucidchart leak from last week. We’ll have to wait and see exactly how it all works out, but let’s just say that our earlier prediction of in-app document editing is pretty solid as well, given the nature of the release that was sent to us today.
When Mike and I started Instagram nearly two years ago, we set out to change and improve the way the world communicates and shares. We’ve had an amazing time watching Instagram grow into a vibrant community of people from all around the globe. Today, we couldn’t be happier to announce that…
Microsoft is currently testing a Technical Preview version of Office 15, its next-generation office productivity suite. A small number of third-party partners, OEMs, and businesses have access to the code, but Microsoft is staying mum on the exact features of its next release. We previously took a closer look at Office 15 with detailed screenshots of its new Metro inspired interface, showing off the clean and simple look for the future of Office. Today we are able to share details on a number of new and improved features in each of the core applications for Office 15, thanks to several people with access to the early Technical Preview code. From Touch and Reading Mode to a Weather Bar feature in Outlook 15, we have exclusive details on Microsoft’s plans — read on to find out more.
Just loving the design and content of this awesome site, utterly brilliant. Do yourself a favour and check it out.
by Sputnik8
This is a desktop concept that I’ve recently put together for fun. I thought I’d post a few screens to see what people here think. The screens include variations of explorer, ie (with a quick redesign of windows.com and bing), media center/player, and skype. Note that I didn’t aim for the design to be completely consistent with what MS calls ‘metro’ (for instance, I specifically didn’t want loops around icons, among other things). Anyway, click on the images to see the full versions.
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