Jan
21st

Reinventing Reading

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I find the majority of articles discussing the shape of Apple’s ‘latest creation’, frustrating. What bugs me is their collective lack of commitment and their constant need to apologise for being part of the hype around what will be the world’s first, full-colour digital e-reader. Let me place my neck squarely on the block and predict the most important dimension of the next Wednesday’s launch: it will change publishing, forever. Yep, it’s a multi-touch tablet that will play music and movies and apps and propose an initially frustrating on-screen keyboard solution, which will ultimately prove blissfully easy to use – but the real news, the point that needs making, is that the device, which will certainly not be called iSlate, will lead to a complete overhaul of how most of us read.

This quantum shift in the way we read newspapers, magazines and books won’t happen overnight – just as the music industry didn’t embrace iTunes’ seminal solution to the problem of making money from digital pop - but it will always be perceived as the beginning of reading, post printing press.

I have it on good authority that several major UK newspapers have been approached to format their publications for ‘a tablet device’. And as an author with my own book available in digital format, I can tell you that publishers and authors know that a move to the next phase of publishing is long overdue. But my main reason for focussing on the e-reader part of the new tablet equation, is that as a race of word hungry wretches, we’re all crying out for someone with Apple’s clout to push us to the next and inevitable rung on the reading ladder. Whether we realise it or not, the option to download any book, any newspaper or magazine from any year, month or day, in full colour, in an instant, is as inevitable as the death of the combustion engine.

For some sage commentary on Apple’s latest offering I recommend following @claudineb (Technology Editor for The Telegraph) who will be at the launch in San Francisco next Wednesday.

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Aug
10th

Tomorrow’s Web

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Tomorrow’s Web - a conference about our Internet future run by young people, for young people. I met some really cool folks including web legend Charlie McDonnell (aka CharlieIsSoCoolLike) and chucked a bunch of copies of Dot Robot into the audience!!! A big shout to all who attended and Grant the organiser.

Pics care of adamcharnock

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Aug
4th

We Make Stories

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We Make Stories is a fun idea for the little people in your life. Create your own comics and tales with a number of simple Flash-based tools which offer the chance to remix the classics and even create your own printable pop-up story!

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6 Comments

Aug
4th

Free Online Music Machine!

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You just have to check out Hobnox Audiotool. It’s a browser-based electronic music production tool - a bit like Reason - and it’s free! Read the pop-up instructions. Create yo’ funky vibe. Upload it to the web. Genius! Follow hobnox on Twitter @Hobnox.

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May
25th

Skynet - for real!

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Uber British mathematician and physicist Stephen Wolfram’s latest creation has been revealed to the world. You’ve gotta give WolframAlpha.com a try. It might look like a search engine, but it’s very different. It’s a computational logic engine - the beginning of a huge project designed to make all systematic knowledge, instantly computable. What does that mean? Well, try this: my electric bike is reputed to go 20 miles on one charge. I can travel at 25mph on it and I want to know how long my battery will last me in time. If I enter ‘20 miles at 25 mph’ into Google, I get a list of rather irrelevant pages from other people’s sites. If I put ‘20 miles at 25 mph’ into WolframAlpha I get the time in seconds and minutes (2880 secs or 48 mins). The computers behind the site work out, from my plain English, what I’m after and boom, I have my answer - along with a bunch of other mathematically related info. It’s like an real life version of Skynet (the fictional computer system that gives rise to the robots in Terminator). Indeed, & this is really cool, I asked WolframAlpha ‘Are you Skynet’ and the image above is the answer he gave! (yep, it’s a joke based on the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey with HAL’s iconic red eye in the middle of the logo. Genius.)

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May
5th

World’s 13th most influential Twitter user - Me!

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The Twitter Index is a list of the world’s 200 most influential users of Twitter. I was amazed to receive an email telling me that I am ranked 13th on the list! Just after Downing Street - and above Barack Obama!!! Jonathan Ross is 1st, Stephen Fry 3rd and Lance Armstrong 8th. The list is compiled using algorithms designed to calculate a user’s standing within the Twitter community, how often their name is used, how much their messages are passed around and the interest their posts generate within their readership.

Other notable entries in the list include Twitter itself at 24th, Tony Hawks & Britney Spears 44th & 45th respectively- and Arnold Schwarzenegger 97th!

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Mar
27th

Twitter Mob!

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OMG! Which is best, Twitter or Facebook? That was the question behind the hugely successful ‘flash’ meet up (Tweetup?) in London’s Somerset House. I can’t tell you the result (although you could find out without too much searching). What I can say is that using only my Twitter account from Mon to Thurs to generate a crowd, I didn’t embarrass myself! The event was just awsome. And to all those who turned up… please leave your Twitter name below in the comments box. You were all AMAZING and I can’t thank you enough.

And god bless Puffin, my publisher, who turned up with copies of my book Dot Robot. I was genuinely mobbed for signings!

Check some of the images and accounts of the event generously uploaded by the people who were there:

here, here, here, here and … er… here!

Picture by Rodney Isemann

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135 Comments

Sep
16th

Chromatic

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I’m just lovin’ Google Chrome. The world’s best known search engineers have applied their ’simple but sophisticated’ ethos to the problem of browsing the net and come out looking shiny. I particularly like the amount of screen-estate Chrome leaves free. My favourite features include ‘incognito mode’ and the ‘dynamic tabs’ which enable you to grab the tab of a website and move it out into its own window. Here’s hoping they Mac-up very soon. If you’re on a PC you can try it for yourself.

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