A Phun-like Game on iPhone

2008 July 09

A new game called Rolando has been announced for iPhone. I don’t totally understand what’s going on in the video above, but it looks a lot like the Phun, the ingenious-yet-silly physics experimentation app that Jason and Elaine have mentioned. Maybe this developer took the Phun engine and adapted it into a game, adding some interesting finger-touch controls?

Yahoo Always Knows Where I Am

I recently got my invitation to join the beta test of Fire Eagle, a new location-tracking service from Yahoo. Now, technically, it doesn’t “track” where you are, but rather, when you tell it where you are, it listens, and then shares that information with other online applications that you approve. The more apps you plug into it, the more useful it is.

For example, an app on my iPhone could monitor my geographical location and ping Fire Eagle with an update every so often. So iPhone says “now he’s in New York,” and Fire Eagle updates its record. Then, say my weather-tracking app checks with Fire Eagle, which tells it “last I heard, he’s in New York.” So the weather app says “cool, thanks” and then presents me with the forecast in NYC automatically, and I go “whoa, how did you know I went to New York? You’re just a silly weather app.”

Fire Eagle bills itself as “the secure and stylish way to share your location with sites and services online,” and so far, I’d say it lives up to that promise. Although it’s essentially just a database that tracks only one thing (your location), the more applications and devices that become “location-aware” by connecting to this service, the more useful it will become.

I should mention that, of course, there are huge privacy concerns (or should be) whenever people voluntarily share their whereabouts with a corporate entity, but Yahoo swears that they retain only your most recent location and no historical data. (Of course, other services that you authorize to access your Fire Eagle data may retain the information longer.) I appreciate that the UI even has a “My Privacy” page that enables you to temporarily “hide” yourself and ostensibly delete all your location data from Yahoo servers.

Comic (Sans) ATM

2008 June 29

Although Comic Sans is typically misused when trying to make signage and flyers appear friendlier, I actually love it here in this ATM interface. The user experience of most ATMs is so poorly designed that the fact that this ATM’s creator gave at least an ounce of thought to typeface selection (even though they went with old C.S.) gives me hope. (Plus, the transaction fee is only $1.49 — a steal!)

Command Propeller Separator

Since posting on the origin of the Apple key, I dined at an establishment that found a completely new use for that command propeller symbol:

Criminal Tomatoes

2008 June 24

I was about to run out to the store for some tomatoes, hoping to make my first batch of summer gazpacho, when I remembered the salmonella outbreak. I checked the FDA’s website for the status, and encountered these photos:

The first thing that I noticed is that these look like perfectly normal tomatoes. Salmonella, a bacterium, is invisible to the naked eye. So why is the FDA showing me absolutely useless pictures of infected tomatoes?

The second thing I noticed is that the captions seem to attribute blame — and, therefore, agency — to the tomatoes themselves, as though they actively conspired to spread disease among the human population. The images now look more like police lineup photos, like something on the FBI’s most wanted list:

Site content and design © copyright 2006–2008 Scott Murray.