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weblog | web standards and the emerging internet


@media Ajax 2007

I have the honour and terror of presenting at @media Ajax on home turf this November. It's a privilege to be speaking alongside the likes of Brendan Eich (creator of Javascript), Douglas Crockford (inventor of JSON), John Resig (JQuery lead) and about a dozen other top dogs.

In a lineup like that I clearly can't talk about nuts and bolts Javascript. Instead I'm taking a slightly unusual tack for me: revelations. Since Ajax came along my job has changed in ways I wouldn't have predicted. Technically I'm a flavour of designer yet after many years of specialising I've found myself having to skill up again.

  • To keep a handle on what the rest of the team produce I've become a testing fanatic;

  • I've had to go back and relearn how to program - not to necessarily produce back-end code but to understand what the real implications of my design decisions are;

  • I've been converted to Agile practices as a means of effective collaboration.

None of these things are traditionally within the remit of 'design' but they all feed into producing a successful app. To try and describe these changes and what I've done about th

Etech is over

Etech is over and a great time was had by all. Our presentation was dogged by technical difficulties that meant I ended up using old slides but everyone seemed to enjoy it regardless. With hindsight I think Charles and I should have been more clear with our objectives: the talk wasn't about collective intelligence per se but rather complexity and how that effects interface decisions... Still, I really enjoyed speaking and we had loads of interesting conversations off the back of it.

And that brings me on to the most important aspect of eTech - the conversations. I've never found that many sharp people gathered together in one place before. Every person I met seemed to have some combination of skills outside of the norm and brought unique perspectives to bear on every topic. Here are some examples:

I chatted with Timo from Nature about getting academia more involved in sharing knowledge and community building, something he's been doing for a while and I've been talking about with my friend Chris at the EES.

Charles and I talked to a chap called Karl from the Rockefeller Institute about socio-political development, the evolution of civilisations, the long tail of micro-cultures and weak signal detection.

We spent an afternoon with Peter Biddle of Microsoft dis

Speaking at eTech

On Sunday I'm packing my bags and heading for San Diego for eTech. I've always wanted to go to eTech - it seems to be one of the most interesting events on the circuit - and this year I'm incredibly excited to be speaking! Fellow Tramponaught Charles Armstrong and I are tag teaming Collective Intelligence, Indeterminacy, and the Illusion of Control... It's a bit of a mouthful, I know. It should be interesting though and I'm looking forward to it. Charles is doing the first half on the human need to build mental models of the tools they use and I'm going to quickly run through the increasing difficulty in letting them do that with modern emergent systems. Yep.

Straight after the conference I'm going to be hopping in a car and driving to San Francisco via the coast road. I don't exactly know why but it appeals to me for some reason. I did a long drive down to Key West during The Spring Experience in December and really enjoyed it. This time it'll be two or three days on the road, staying in motels along the way - a proper road trip. Then I've got a few days in SF to just chill, have a look around and take in the sights before heading back

Leaving freelancing

After 5 good years I'm hanging up my freelancing spurs and settling into a more sedentary existence. Well, not exactly. I'm becoming Head of User Experience at Trampoline Systems. As a small start-up 'sedentary' is likely to be completely the wrong word... It's going to be hard work - we're up against the big boys - but it's a really interesting field and the product we've been working on, SONAR, is absolutely fascinating. I don't know whether anyone saw the Enron Explorer, which was our technology proof of concept, but it's a step-change from that in terms of complexity.

Freelancing has been very good to me. I've been privileged to work for and with some really talented and inspiring people, made some good friends and learned a hell of a lot. I've been on longer term contracts for most of the last 2 years because I wanted to give myself the time to really get involved in some bigger projects. Over that period I've become less interested in web standards per se (it's just how I do things so I take them for granted now) and more obsessed with problems and how to solve them. The logical next step is to get really involved with a single problem domain and see where that takes me. The Trampoline domain includes collective intelligence, social behaviour and semantics, all of

MySpace vs Facebook

I've been on MySpace for a while now, basically because loads of my friends are, but I've barely used it in the last 2 months, apart from checking on a few bands. It's just too much hassle. It's hard to wade through the hundreds of peoples' friends looking for bands I want to check out. It's a hassle trawling through all the spam comments and ads for clubs/bands/whatever to see what my friends are doing. But all my friends are there...

I was invited to Facebook a month or so back by a mate and I registered, spent ten minutes filling in info and then forgot about it. But in the last week it feels like there might be a change a-comin'... I've had maybe half a dozen friends join and all of a sudden I'm logging in regularly. With Twitter-like status, photos, the activity feeds, stories, comment threading and an interesting selection of participation functionality Facebook have done a far better job of the social stuff. It's an easier and more fun way to keep up with my friends.

The separation of my online social community from my music one seems right - the uses are quite distinct. A lot of people happen to use MySpace just to keep up with mates though, and I suspect things are about to correct... I think both sites would be the better for it too.